Dynamic API Routes
You can add the dynamic routes used for pages to API Routes too. Learn how it works here.
Examples
API routes support dynamic routes, and follow
the same file naming rules used for pages
.
For example, the API route pages/api/post/[pid].js
has the following code:
export default function handler(req, res) {
const { pid } = req.query
res.end(`Post: ${pid}`)
}
Now, a request to /api/post/abc
will respond with the text: Post: abc
.
Index routes and Dynamic API routes
A very common RESTful pattern is to set up routes like this:
GET api/posts
- gets a list of posts, probably paginatedGET api/posts/12345
- gets post id 12345
We can model this in two ways:
- Option 1:
/api/posts.js
/api/posts/[postId].js
- Option 2:
/api/posts/index.js
/api/posts/[postId].js
Both are equivalent. A third option of only using /api/posts/[postId].js
is
not valid because Dynamic Routes (including Catch-all routes - see below) do not
have an undefined
state and GET api/posts
will not match
/api/posts/[postId].js
under any circumstances.
Catch all API routes
API Routes can be extended to catch all paths by adding three dots (...
)
inside the brackets. For example:
pages/api/post/[...slug].js
matches/api/post/a
, but also/api/post/a/b
,/api/post/a/b/c
and so on.
Note: You can use names other than
slug
, such as:[...param]
Matched parameters will be sent as a query parameter (slug
in the example) to
the page, and it will always be an array, so, the path /api/post/a
will have
the following query
object:
{ "slug": ["a"] }
And in the case of /api/post/a/b
, and any other matching path, new parameters
will be added to the array, like so:
{ "slug": ["a", "b"] }
An API route for pages/api/post/[...slug].js
could look like this:
export default function handler(req, res) {
const { slug } = req.query
res.end(`Post: ${slug.join(', ')}`)
}
Now, a request to /api/post/a/b/c
will respond with the text: Post: a, b, c
.
Optional catch all API routes
Catch all routes can be made optional by including the parameter in double
brackets ([[...slug]]
).
For example, pages/api/post/[[...slug]].js
will match /api/post
,
/api/post/a
, /api/post/a/b
, and so on.
The main difference between catch all and optional catch all routes is that with
optional, the route without the parameter is also matched (/api/post
in the
example above).
The query
objects are as follows:
{ } // GET `/api/post` (empty object)
{ "slug": ["a"] } // `GET /api/post/a` (single-element array)
{ "slug": ["a", "b"] } // `GET /api/post/a/b` (multi-element array)
Caveats
- Predefined API routes take precedence over dynamic API routes, and dynamic API
routes over catch all API routes. Take a look at the following examples:
pages/api/post/create.js
- Will match/api/post/create
pages/api/post/[pid].js
- Will match/api/post/1
,/api/post/abc
, etc. But not/api/post/create
pages/api/post/[...slug].js
- Will match/api/post/1/2
,/api/post/a/b/c
, etc. But not/api/post/create
,/api/post/abc
Related
For more information on what to do next, we recommend the following sections: