Hi everyone.
Here is my notes about `restclient` that can help you to forget about `Postman` (which is cool as well).
Here is the example:
# # get all people from star wars # GET https://swapi.co/api/people
To define an action you need to start with a comment.
Then you need to set method (GET, POST, PUT and other) and the url of course.
Now you can execute the query. Press `C-c C-c` (CTRL+c twice) and new buffer (`*HTTP Response*`) with the result will be opened.
At the bottom of that buffer you can see response headers:
// GET https://swapi.co/api/people // HTTP/1.1 200 OK // Date: Sun, 22 Oct 2017 19:03:17 GMT // Content-Type: application/json // Transfer-Encoding: chunked // Connection: keep-alive // Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS // Vary: Accept, Cookie // X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN // Etag: "d080408a4d656729b0f52a6feb0783ca" // Via: 1.1 vegur // Server: cloudflare-nginx // CF-RAY: 3b1eb73cda7d63af-FRA // Request duration: 1.663359s
Pretty simple, ha?
To define headers you need to write them just below the URL definition:
# # get all people from star wars # GET https://swapi.co/api/people User-Agent: Emacs Restclient Content-Type: application/json
If you want to send data to the server you can define it right after empty line of the URL (or headers if exist) definition.
Here is an example from `restclient.el` repo.
# # Post works too, entity just goes after an empty line. Same is for PUT. # POST https://jira.atlassian.com/rest/api/2/search Content-Type: application/json { "jql": "project = HSP", "startAt": 0, "maxResults": 15, "fields": [ "summary", "status", "assignee" ] }
It's also possible and it's pretty easy
# # post a file # POST http://httpbin.org/post Content-Type: text/plain < /etc/hosts
Variables are useful to define the host or test user credentials.
Here how you can define it.
:myvar = https://google.com
You can also use elisp to set a value
:myvar := (some (artbitrary 'elisp)
use `:variable-name` syntax to get the value of variable:
# # use a variable # GET :myvar/imghp
Restclient.el is a great package you definitely should try. It allows you quickly explore or test the API without leaving the Emacs.
Try it <3