Principles of Web API Design: Delivering Value with APIs and Microservices

Principles of Web API Design: Delivering Value with APIs and Microservices

  • Downloads:5634
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-02-12 09:51:56
  • Update Date:2025-09-07
  • Status:finish
  • Author:James Higginbotham
  • ISBN:0137355637
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

The Full-Lifecycle Guide to API Design

Principles of Web API Design brings together principles and processes to help you succeed across the entire API design lifecycle。 Drawing on extensive in-the-trenches experience, leading consultant James Higginbotham helps you align every stakeholder on specific outcomes, design APIs that deliver value, and scale the design process from small teams to the entire organization。

Higginbotham helps you bring an outside-in perspective to API design to reflect the voices of customers and product teams, map requirements to specific and well-organized APIs, and choose the right API style for writing them。 He walks through a real-world example from the ground up, offering guidance for anyone designing new APIs or extending existing APIs。
Deliver great APIs by getting your design processes right Gain agreement on specific outcomes from design teams, customers, and other stakeholders Craft job stories, conduct EventStorming, and model capabilities Identify the right APIs, and organize operations into coherent API profiles Choose the best styles for each project: REST, gRPC, GraphQL, or event-based async APIs Refine designs based on feedback from documenters, testers, and customers Decompose APIs into microservices Mature your API program, implementing design and management processes that scale This guide is invaluable for anyone involved in planning or building APIs--architects, developers, team leaders, managers in single and multi-team environments, and any technical or business professional delivering API-as-a-product offerings。

Register your book for convenient access to downloads, updates, and/or corrections as they become available。 See inside book for details。

Download

Reviews

Jevgenij

Too basic and tries to cover too many topics。

Marcin Golenia

I didn't enjoy the book in general, it has some good quotations and few good moments but I think It describes a lot of trivial things - if you are somewhere at the begining of You career or You didn't have a chance to write some APIs before or You didn't read a book about apis/microservices this still may be good pick。 Otherwise You will be bored - nothing advanced can be found here。Some topics are way too briefly described。 Event Storming (I am not sure if this chapter is very needed in this bo I didn't enjoy the book in general, it has some good quotations and few good moments but I think It describes a lot of trivial things - if you are somewhere at the begining of You career or You didn't have a chance to write some APIs before or You didn't read a book about apis/microservices this still may be good pick。 Otherwise You will be bored - nothing advanced can be found here。Some topics are way too briefly described。 Event Storming (I am not sure if this chapter is very needed in this book) - only big picture, Hateoas - only few samples with short description, security - several basic security features described, DDD。。。The chapter "Remaining agile with api design" is short and obvious。 I also didn't like the BE & FE teams split which was mentioned。 I know that companies operate that way, but this way of working shouldn't be spreaded in books。 Even in Microfrontends in Action the author doesn't make such distinction。 I am biased but also QA teams which were mentioned next to TDD made me sad。If You don't remind reading more books I recommend Sam Newman "Building Microsercives", Subbu Allamaraju "Restful Web Services Cookbook" and Kleppmann "Designing data intensive applications" instead。 These will help You more。 。。。more