HTTP request methods
HTTP defines a set of request methods to indicate the desired action to be performed for a given resource. Although they can also be nouns, these request methods are sometimes referred to as HTTP verbs. Each of them implements a different semantic, but some common features are shared by a group of them: e.g. a request method can be safe, idempotent, or cacheable.
GET-
The
GETmethod requests a representation of the specified resource. Requests usingGETshould only retrieve data. HEAD-
The
HEADmethod asks for a response identical to aGETrequest, but without the response body. POST-
The
POSTmethod submits an entity to the specified resource, often causing a change in state or side effects on the server. PUT-
The
PUTmethod replaces all current representations of the target resource with the request payload. DELETE-
The
DELETEmethod deletes the specified resource. CONNECT-
The
CONNECTmethod establishes a tunnel to the server identified by the target resource. OPTIONS-
The
OPTIONSmethod describes the communication options for the target resource. TRACE-
The
TRACEmethod performs a message loop-back test along the path to the target resource. PATCH-
The
PATCHmethod applies partial modifications to a resource.
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| HTTP Semantics # CONNECT |
| HTTP Semantics # DELETE |
| HTTP Semantics # GET |
| HTTP Semantics # HEAD |
| HTTP Semantics # OPTIONS |
| HTTP Semantics # POST |
| HTTP Semantics # PUT |
| HTTP Semantics # TRACE |
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