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JavaScript and JSON Essentials

You're reading from   JavaScript and JSON Essentials Build light weight, scalable, and faster web applications with the power of JSON

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788624701
Length 226 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Sai S Sriparasa Sai S Sriparasa
Author Profile Icon Sai S Sriparasa
Sai S Sriparasa
Bruno Joseph D'mello Bruno Joseph D'mello
Author Profile Icon Bruno Joseph D'mello
Bruno Joseph D'mello
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with JSON 2. The JSON Structures FREE CHAPTER 3. AJAX Requests with JSON 4. Cross-Domain Asynchronous Requests 5. Debugging JSON 6. Building the Carousel Application 7. Alternate Implementations of JSON 8. Introduction to hapi.js 9. Storing JSON Documents in MongoDB 10. Configuring the Task Runner Using JSON 11. JSON for Real-Time and Distributed Data 12. Case Studies in JSON 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Testing the APIs using POSTMAN


The API endpoint we created (http://localhost:3300/greetings) is a GET method request type API call and it is quite easy to test the API endpoint directly in the browser URL locator. This is because when you hit any URL input from the browser URL locator directly, by default it performs a GET method request. So what about the POST, PUT, or DELETE request methods? Definitely, the browser is able to make those requests but not by default or through any direct input in the URL locator but by using AJAX requests or FORM POST requests.

In such cases, if we have created an API server and now we want to test our URL endpoint for sanity with respect to other request methods, we can't do it directly. Either we need to write some JavaScript code at the client side to make those API calls or use a REST client such as POSTMAN that can make API calls for us.

Testing hapi server APIs using POSTMAN

Let us install POSTMAN for our use case of the hapi server APIs and test it....

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