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Cross-platform UI Development with Xamarin.Forms

You're reading from   Cross-platform UI Development with Xamarin.Forms

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784391195
Length 330 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Paul Johnson Paul Johnson
Author Profile Icon Paul Johnson
Paul Johnson
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Cross-platform UI Development with Xamarin.Forms
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. In the Beginning… 2. Let's Get the Party Started FREE CHAPTER 3. Making It Look Pretty and Logging In 4. Making Your Application Portable 5. Data, Generics, and Making Sense of Information 6. A View to a Kill 7. Connect Me to Your Other Services 8. What a Bind! 9. Addressing the Issue 10. This is the World Calling… 11. A Portable Settings Class 12. Xamarin Forms Labs 13. Social Media into the Mix 14. Bringing It All Together Index

Let's take a REST


Before we look at the interface, we need to understand what REST is. In its simplest terms, REST is a set of six constraints, which when applied to an architecture (such as a web service) gives the basis of the RESTful style.

While it is outside the scope of this book to look at the architecture, there are many very good websites that cover what REST is. As far as we're concerned, we are interested in communicating with the web service.

REST services are typically transmitted using HTTP's GET and POST methods and return data in plain XML.

POST and GET

The best way to think about the difference between POST and GET is to consider a standard mail. If you have something to send, you POST it. If you receive something, you GET it.

So far, it's easy

When we receive the information from the server, it is typically in XML. This is a plain text format in a serialized format (which is a form of formatting that takes the objects being sent by the server and creates a plain text inline list...

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