This project is active and maintained by David Alpert.
An easy to use HTTP client that supports:
- HEAD, PUT, DELETE, GET, POST
- Cookies
- Authentication
- Dynamic and Static Typing
- XML, JSON and WWW-Url form encoded encoding/decoding
- File upload both via PUT and POST (multipart/formdata)
- Some other neat little features....
Licensed under Modified BSD (i.e. pretty much MIT).
For full License and included software licenses please see LICENSE.TXT
Please log all issues here: http://youtrack.codebetter.com/issues/EHTTP
You can either download the source and compile or use nuget at http://nuget.org. To install with nuget:
Install-Package EasyHttp
The documentation can be found on the wiki.
To post/put a customer to some service:
var customer = new Customer();
customer.Name = "Joe";
customer.Email = "joe@smith.com";
var http = new HttpClient();
http.Post("url", customer, HttpContentTypes.ApplicationJson);
To get some data in JSON format:
var http = new HttpClient();
http.Request.Accept = HttpContentTypes.ApplicationJson;
var response = http.Get("url");
var customer = response.StaticBody<Customer>();
Console.WriteLine("Name: {0}", customer.Name);
To post/put a customer to some service:
var customer = new ExpandoObject(); // Or any dynamic type
customer.Name = "Joe";
customer.Email = "joe@smith.com";
var http = new HttpClient();
http.Post("url", customer, HttpContentTypes.ApplicationJson);
To get some data in JSON format:
var http = new HttpClient();
http.Request.Accept = HttpContentTypes.ApplicationJson;
var response = http.Get("url");
var customer = response.DynamicBody;
Console.WriteLine("Name {0}", customer.Name);
Both in Static and Dynamic versions, hierarchies are supported.
To get some data from a service
var http = new HttpClient();
http.Get("url", new {Name = "test"});
Should translate to the following url being passed. url?Name=test the value will be urlencoded.
To get some data in JSon format.
var http = new HttpClient();
http.Request.Accept = HttpContentTypes.ApplicationJson;
http.Get("url", new {Name = "test"});
For serialization / deserialization, you can use pretty much any type of naming convention, be it Propercase, CamelCase, lowerCamelCase, with_underscores, etc. If for some reason, your convention is not picked up, you can always decorate the property with an attribute:
[JsonName("mycustomname")]
public string SomeWeirdCombination { get; set; }
Copyright (c) 2010 - 2017 Hadi Hariri and Project Contributors
JsonFX: Licensed under MIT. EasyHttp uses the awesome JsonFX library at http://github.com/jsonfx