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Building an API Product

You're reading from   Building an API Product Design, implement, release, and maintain API products that meet user needs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2024
Last Updated in Jan 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837630448
Length 278 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Bruno Pedro Bruno Pedro
Author Profile Icon Bruno Pedro
Bruno Pedro
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:The API Product
2. Chapter 1: What Are APIs? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: API User Experience 4. Chapter 3: API-as-a-Product 5. Chapter 4: API Life Cycle 6. Part 2:Designing an API Product
7. Chapter 5: Elements of API Product Design 8. Chapter 6: Identifying an API Strategy 9. Chapter 7: Defining and Validating an API Design 10. Chapter 8: Specifying an API 11. Part 3:Implementing an API Product
12. Chapter 9: Development Techniques 13. Chapter 10: API Security 14. Chapter 11: API Testing 15. Chapter 12: API Quality Assurance 16. Part 4:Releasing an API Product
17. Chapter 13: Deploying the API 18. Chapter 14: Observing API Behavior 19. Chapter 15: Distribution Channels 20. Part 5:Maintaining an API Product
21. Chapter 16: User Support 22. Chapter 17: API Versioning 23. Chapter 18: Planning for API Retirement 24. Index 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

Specification

The API’s specification is directly related to the chosen architectural style. In other words, there’s at least one specification that’s compatible with each architectural style. Sometimes, the specification is even a part of the architectural style. For example, a REST API can be defined using the OpenAPI specification. However, OpenAPI can also define APIs that don’t follow the REST architectural style. As a different example, let’s say you define a GraphQL API using the architectural style documentation. There’s no need to use a separate specification. In either case, the outcome is that you will have a machine-readable API definition. This is important because API consumers communicate with APIs using tools that can read definitions. Without those machine-readable definitions, you would have to ask users to enter all the requested details by hand. Every time developers build an integration with an API, they can use a machine...

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