To my knowledge both serves the same purpose. Except the fact that @PathVariable
is from Spring MVC and @PathParam
is from JAX-RS. Any insights on this?
问题:
回答1:
@PathVariable and @PathParam both are used for accessing parameters from URI Template
Differences:
- As you mention @PathVariable is from spring and @PathParam is from JAX-RS.
- @PathParam can use with REST only, where @PathVariable used in Spring so it works in MVC and REST.
回答2:
PathParam:
To assign URI parameter values to method arguments. In Spring, it is @RequestParam
.
Eg.,
http://localhost:8080/books?isbn=1234
@GetMapping("/books/")
public Book getBookDetails(@RequestParam("isbn") String isbn) {
PathVariable:
To assign URI placeholder values to method arguments.
Eg.,
http://localhost:8080/books/1234
@GetMapping("/books/{isbn}")
public Book getBook(@PathVariable("isbn") String isbn) {
回答3:
@PathParam is a parameter annotation which allows you to map variable URI path fragments into your method call.
@Path("/library")
public class Library {
@GET
@Path("/book/{isbn}")
public String getBook(@PathParam("isbn") String id) {
// search my database and get a string representation and return it
}
}
for more details : JBoss DOCS
In Spring MVC you can use the @PathVariable annotation on a method argument to bind it to the value of a URI template variable for more details : SPRING DOCS
回答4:
@PathParam
is a parameter annotation which allows you to map variable URI path fragments into your method call.
@PathVariable
is to obtain some placeholder from the URI (Spring call it an URI Template)
回答5:
@PathVariable
@PathVariable it is the annotation, that is used in the URI for the incoming request. Let’s look below
http://localhost:8080/restcalls/101?id=10&name=xyz
@RequestParam
@RequestParam annotation used for accessing the query parameter values from the request.
public String getRestCalls(
@RequestParam(value="id", required=true) int id,
@RequestParam(value="name", required=true) String name){...}
Note
whatever we are requesting with rest call i.e, @PathVariable
whatever we are accessing for writing queries i.e, @RequestParam