Everything-claude-code api-design
REST API design patterns including resource naming, status codes, pagination, filtering, error responses, versioning, and rate limiting for production APIs.
install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/affaan-m/everything-claude-code
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/affaan-m/everything-claude-code "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/.agents/skills/api-design" ~/.claude/skills/affaan-m-everything-claude-code-api-design && rm -rf "$T"
manifest:
.agents/skills/api-design/SKILL.mdsource content
API Design Patterns
Conventions and best practices for designing consistent, developer-friendly REST APIs.
When to Activate
- Designing new API endpoints
- Reviewing existing API contracts
- Adding pagination, filtering, or sorting
- Implementing error handling for APIs
- Planning API versioning strategy
- Building public or partner-facing APIs
Resource Design
URL Structure
# Resources are nouns, plural, lowercase, kebab-case GET /api/v1/users GET /api/v1/users/:id POST /api/v1/users PUT /api/v1/users/:id PATCH /api/v1/users/:id DELETE /api/v1/users/:id # Sub-resources for relationships GET /api/v1/users/:id/orders POST /api/v1/users/:id/orders # Actions that don't map to CRUD (use verbs sparingly) POST /api/v1/orders/:id/cancel POST /api/v1/auth/login POST /api/v1/auth/refresh
Naming Rules
# GOOD /api/v1/team-members # kebab-case for multi-word resources /api/v1/orders?status=active # query params for filtering /api/v1/users/123/orders # nested resources for ownership # BAD /api/v1/getUsers # verb in URL /api/v1/user # singular (use plural) /api/v1/team_members # snake_case in URLs /api/v1/users/123/getOrders # verb in nested resource
HTTP Methods and Status Codes
Method Semantics
| Method | Idempotent | Safe | Use For |
|---|---|---|---|
| GET | Yes | Yes | Retrieve resources |
| POST | No | No | Create resources, trigger actions |
| PUT | Yes | No | Full replacement of a resource |
| PATCH | No* | No | Partial update of a resource |
| DELETE | Yes | No | Remove a resource |
*PATCH can be made idempotent with proper implementation
Status Code Reference
# Success 200 OK — GET, PUT, PATCH (with response body) 201 Created — POST (include Location header) 204 No Content — DELETE, PUT (no response body) # Client Errors 400 Bad Request — Validation failure, malformed JSON 401 Unauthorized — Missing or invalid authentication 403 Forbidden — Authenticated but not authorized 404 Not Found — Resource doesn't exist 409 Conflict — Duplicate entry, state conflict 422 Unprocessable Entity — Semantically invalid (valid JSON, bad data) 429 Too Many Requests — Rate limit exceeded # Server Errors 500 Internal Server Error — Unexpected failure (never expose details) 502 Bad Gateway — Upstream service failed 503 Service Unavailable — Temporary overload, include Retry-After
Common Mistakes
# BAD: 200 for everything { "status": 200, "success": false, "error": "Not found" } # GOOD: Use HTTP status codes semantically HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found { "error": { "code": "not_found", "message": "User not found" } } # BAD: 500 for validation errors # GOOD: 400 or 422 with field-level details # BAD: 200 for created resources # GOOD: 201 with Location header HTTP/1.1 201 Created Location: /api/v1/users/abc-123
Response Format
Success Response
{ "data": { "id": "abc-123", "email": "alice@example.com", "name": "Alice", "created_at": "2025-01-15T10:30:00Z" } }
Collection Response (with Pagination)
{ "data": [ { "id": "abc-123", "name": "Alice" }, { "id": "def-456", "name": "Bob" } ], "meta": { "total": 142, "page": 1, "per_page": 20, "total_pages": 8 }, "links": { "self": "/api/v1/users?page=1&per_page=20", "next": "/api/v1/users?page=2&per_page=20", "last": "/api/v1/users?page=8&per_page=20" } }
Error Response
{ "error": { "code": "validation_error", "message": "Request validation failed", "details": [ { "field": "email", "message": "Must be a valid email address", "code": "invalid_format" }, { "field": "age", "message": "Must be between 0 and 150", "code": "out_of_range" } ] } }
Response Envelope Variants
// Option A: Envelope with data wrapper (recommended for public APIs) interface ApiResponse<T> { data: T; meta?: PaginationMeta; links?: PaginationLinks; } interface ApiError { error: { code: string; message: string; details?: FieldError[]; }; } // Option B: Flat response (simpler, common for internal APIs) // Success: just return the resource directly // Error: return error object // Distinguish by HTTP status code
Pagination
Offset-Based (Simple)
GET /api/v1/users?page=2&per_page=20 # Implementation SELECT * FROM users ORDER BY created_at DESC LIMIT 20 OFFSET 20;
Pros: Easy to implement, supports "jump to page N" Cons: Slow on large offsets (OFFSET 100000), inconsistent with concurrent inserts
Cursor-Based (Scalable)
GET /api/v1/users?cursor=eyJpZCI6MTIzfQ&limit=20 # Implementation SELECT * FROM users WHERE id > :cursor_id ORDER BY id ASC LIMIT 21; -- fetch one extra to determine has_next
{ "data": [...], "meta": { "has_next": true, "next_cursor": "eyJpZCI6MTQzfQ" } }
Pros: Consistent performance regardless of position, stable with concurrent inserts Cons: Cannot jump to arbitrary page, cursor is opaque
When to Use Which
| Use Case | Pagination Type |
|---|---|
| Admin dashboards, small datasets (<10K) | Offset |
| Infinite scroll, feeds, large datasets | Cursor |
| Public APIs | Cursor (default) with offset (optional) |
| Search results | Offset (users expect page numbers) |
Filtering, Sorting, and Search
Filtering
# Simple equality GET /api/v1/orders?status=active&customer_id=abc-123 # Comparison operators (use bracket notation) GET /api/v1/products?price[gte]=10&price[lte]=100 GET /api/v1/orders?created_at[after]=2025-01-01 # Multiple values (comma-separated) GET /api/v1/products?category=electronics,clothing # Nested fields (dot notation) GET /api/v1/orders?customer.country=US
Sorting
# Single field (prefix - for descending) GET /api/v1/products?sort=-created_at # Multiple fields (comma-separated) GET /api/v1/products?sort=-featured,price,-created_at
Full-Text Search
# Search query parameter GET /api/v1/products?q=wireless+headphones # Field-specific search GET /api/v1/users?email=alice
Sparse Fieldsets
# Return only specified fields (reduces payload) GET /api/v1/users?fields=id,name,email GET /api/v1/orders?fields=id,total,status&include=customer.name
Authentication and Authorization
Token-Based Auth
# Bearer token in Authorization header GET /api/v1/users Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIs... # API key (for server-to-server) GET /api/v1/data X-API-Key: sk_live_abc123
Authorization Patterns
// Resource-level: check ownership app.get("/api/v1/orders/:id", async (req, res) => { const order = await Order.findById(req.params.id); if (!order) return res.status(404).json({ error: { code: "not_found" } }); if (order.userId !== req.user.id) return res.status(403).json({ error: { code: "forbidden" } }); return res.json({ data: order }); }); // Role-based: check permissions app.delete("/api/v1/users/:id", requireRole("admin"), async (req, res) => { await User.delete(req.params.id); return res.status(204).send(); });
Rate Limiting
Headers
HTTP/1.1 200 OK X-RateLimit-Limit: 100 X-RateLimit-Remaining: 95 X-RateLimit-Reset: 1640000000 # When exceeded HTTP/1.1 429 Too Many Requests Retry-After: 60 { "error": { "code": "rate_limit_exceeded", "message": "Rate limit exceeded. Try again in 60 seconds." } }
Rate Limit Tiers
| Tier | Limit | Window | Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anonymous | 30/min | Per IP | Public endpoints |
| Authenticated | 100/min | Per user | Standard API access |
| Premium | 1000/min | Per API key | Paid API plans |
| Internal | 10000/min | Per service | Service-to-service |
Versioning
URL Path Versioning (Recommended)
/api/v1/users /api/v2/users
Pros: Explicit, easy to route, cacheable Cons: URL changes between versions
Header Versioning
GET /api/users Accept: application/vnd.myapp.v2+json
Pros: Clean URLs Cons: Harder to test, easy to forget
Versioning Strategy
1. Start with /api/v1/ — don't version until you need to 2. Maintain at most 2 active versions (current + previous) 3. Deprecation timeline: - Announce deprecation (6 months notice for public APIs) - Add Sunset header: Sunset: Sat, 01 Jan 2026 00:00:00 GMT - Return 410 Gone after sunset date 4. Non-breaking changes don't need a new version: - Adding new fields to responses - Adding new optional query parameters - Adding new endpoints 5. Breaking changes require a new version: - Removing or renaming fields - Changing field types - Changing URL structure - Changing authentication method
Implementation Patterns
TypeScript (Next.js API Route)
import { z } from "zod"; import { NextRequest, NextResponse } from "next/server"; const createUserSchema = z.object({ email: z.string().email(), name: z.string().min(1).max(100), }); export async function POST(req: NextRequest) { const body = await req.json(); const parsed = createUserSchema.safeParse(body); if (!parsed.success) { return NextResponse.json({ error: { code: "validation_error", message: "Request validation failed", details: parsed.error.issues.map(i => ({ field: i.path.join("."), message: i.message, code: i.code, })), }, }, { status: 422 }); } const user = await createUser(parsed.data); return NextResponse.json( { data: user }, { status: 201, headers: { Location: `/api/v1/users/${user.id}` }, }, ); }
Python (Django REST Framework)
from rest_framework import serializers, viewsets, status from rest_framework.response import Response class CreateUserSerializer(serializers.Serializer): email = serializers.EmailField() name = serializers.CharField(max_length=100) class UserSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer): class Meta: model = User fields = ["id", "email", "name", "created_at"] class UserViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet): serializer_class = UserSerializer permission_classes = [IsAuthenticated] def get_serializer_class(self): if self.action == "create": return CreateUserSerializer return UserSerializer def create(self, request): serializer = CreateUserSerializer(data=request.data) serializer.is_valid(raise_exception=True) user = UserService.create(**serializer.validated_data) return Response( {"data": UserSerializer(user).data}, status=status.HTTP_201_CREATED, headers={"Location": f"/api/v1/users/{user.id}"}, )
Go (net/http)
func (h *UserHandler) CreateUser(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { var req CreateUserRequest if err := json.NewDecoder(r.Body).Decode(&req); err != nil { writeError(w, http.StatusBadRequest, "invalid_json", "Invalid request body") return } if err := req.Validate(); err != nil { writeError(w, http.StatusUnprocessableEntity, "validation_error", err.Error()) return } user, err := h.service.Create(r.Context(), req) if err != nil { switch { case errors.Is(err, domain.ErrEmailTaken): writeError(w, http.StatusConflict, "email_taken", "Email already registered") default: writeError(w, http.StatusInternalServerError, "internal_error", "Internal error") } return } w.Header().Set("Location", fmt.Sprintf("/api/v1/users/%s", user.ID)) writeJSON(w, http.StatusCreated, map[string]any{"data": user}) }
API Design Checklist
Before shipping a new endpoint:
- Resource URL follows naming conventions (plural, kebab-case, no verbs)
- Correct HTTP method used (GET for reads, POST for creates, etc.)
- Appropriate status codes returned (not 200 for everything)
- Input validated with schema (Zod, Pydantic, Bean Validation)
- Error responses follow standard format with codes and messages
- Pagination implemented for list endpoints (cursor or offset)
- Authentication required (or explicitly marked as public)
- Authorization checked (user can only access their own resources)
- Rate limiting configured
- Response does not leak internal details (stack traces, SQL errors)
- Consistent naming with existing endpoints (camelCase vs snake_case)
- Documented (OpenAPI/Swagger spec updated)