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author | Andrey Andreev <narf@devilix.net> | 2013-11-11 13:02:15 +0100 |
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committer | Andrey Andreev <narf@devilix.net> | 2013-11-11 13:02:15 +0100 |
commit | c761a206def7714d18623d46b05adc2bbeedce21 (patch) | |
tree | 332caeb8179aaff123881c085245a0d1bacb5ff7 /user_guide_src/source/general | |
parent | 61c124b37289657c50634a64d6f3921bea05213e (diff) |
Polish changes from PR #2712
Diffstat (limited to 'user_guide_src/source/general')
-rw-r--r-- | user_guide_src/source/general/routing.rst | 37 |
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 25 deletions
diff --git a/user_guide_src/source/general/routing.rst b/user_guide_src/source/general/routing.rst index 6495f1ad4..0b91d3fa9 100644 --- a/user_guide_src/source/general/routing.rst +++ b/user_guide_src/source/general/routing.rst @@ -142,41 +142,28 @@ routing rules to process the back-references. Example:: return 'catalog/product_edit/' . strtolower($product_type) . '/' . $id; }; -Using HTTP Verb in Routes -========================= +Using HTTP verbs in routes +========================== -If you prefer you can use HTTP Verb (or method) to define your routing rules. -This is particularly useful when building RESTful application. You can use standard HTTP -Verb (GET, PUT, POST, DELETE) or custom HTTP Verb (e.g: PURGE). HTTP Verb rule is case -insensitive. All you need to do is add array index using HTTP Verb rule. Example:: +It is possible to use HTTP verbs (request method) to define your routing rules. +This is particularly useful when building RESTful applications. You can use standard HTTP +verbs (GET, PUT, POST, DELETE, PATCH) or a custom one such (e.g. PURGE). HTTP verb rules +are case-insensitive. All you need to do is to add the verb as an array key to your route. +Example:: $route['products']['put'] = 'product/insert'; -In the above example, a PUT request to URI "products" would call the "product" controller -class and "insert" method +In the above example, a PUT request to URI "products" would call the ``Product::insert()`` +controller method. :: $route['products/(:num)']['DELETE'] = 'product/delete/$1'; -A DELETE request to URL with "products" as first segment and a number in the second will be -remapped to the "product" class and "delete" method passing in the match as a variable to -the method. - -:: - - $route['products/([a-z]+)/(\d+)']['get'] = 'product/$1/$2'; - -A GET request to a URI similar to products/shirts/123 would call the "product" controller -class and "shirt" method with number as method parameter - -Using HTTP Verb is optional, so if you want any HTTP Verb to be handled in one rule -You could just write your routing rule without HTTP Verb. Example:: - - $route['product'] = 'product'; +A DELETE request to URL with "products" as first the segment and a number in the second will be +mapped to the ``Product::delete()`` method, passing the numeric value as the first parameter. -This way, all incoming request using any HTTP method containing the word "product" -in the first segment will be remapped to "product" class +Using HTTP verbs is of course, optional. Reserved Routes =============== |