Book Image

Building an API Product

By : Bruno Pedro
Book Image

Building an API Product

By: Bruno Pedro

Overview of this book

The exponential increase in the number of APIs is evidence of their widespread adoption by companies seeking to deliver value to users across diverse industries, making the art of building successful APIs an invaluable skill for anyone involved in product development. With this comprehensive guide, you’ll walk through the entire process of planning, designing, implementing, releasing, and maintaining successful API products. You’ll start by exploring all aspects of APIs, including their types, technologies, protocols, and lifecycle stages. Next, you’ll learn how to define an API strategy and identify business objectives, user personas, and jobs-to-be-done (JTBD). With these skills, you’ll delve into designing and validating API capabilities to create a machine-readable API definition. As you advance, the book helps you understand how to choose the right language and framework for securely releasing an API server and offers insights into analyzing API usage metrics, improving performance, and creating compelling documentation that users love. Finally, you’ll discover ways to support users, manage versions, and communicate changes or the retirement of an API. By the end of this API development book, you’ll have the confidence and skills to create API products that truly stand out in the market.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
1
Part 1:The API Product
6
Part 2:Designing an API Product
11
Part 3:Implementing an API Product
16
Part 4:Releasing an API Product
20
Part 5:Maintaining an API Product

Implementation

Having a machine-readable API definition is halfway to getting an entire API server up and running. I won’t focus on any particular architectural style, so you can keep all options open at this point. The goal of the machine-readable definition is to make it easy to generate server code and configuration and give your API consumers a simple way to interact with your API. Some API server solutions require almost no coding as long as you have a machine-readable definition. One type of coding you’ll need to do—or ask an engineer to do—is the code responsible for the business logic behind each API capability. While the API itself can be almost entirely generated, the logic behind each capability must be programmed and linked to the API. Usually, you’ll start with a first version of your API server that can run locally and will be used to iteratively implement all the business logic behind each of the capabilities. Later, you’ll make...