I have a HTTP class that has a Get, and Post, method. It's a simple class I created to encapsulate Post and Get requests so I don't have to repeat the get/post code throughout the application.
In C#:
class HTTP
{
private CookieContainer cookieJar;
private String userAgent = "...";
public HTTP()
{
this.cookieJar = new CookieContainer();
}
public String get(String url)
{
// Make get request. Return the JSON
}
public String post(String url, String postData)
{
// Make post request. Return the JSON
}
}
I've made the CookieJar a property because I want to preserve the cookie values throughout the session. If the user is logged into Twitter with my application, each request I make (be it get or post) I want to use the cookies so they remain logged in.
That's the basics of it anyway. But, I don't want to return a string in all instances. Sometimes I may want the cookie, or a header value, or something else from the request.
Ideally I'd like to be able to do this in my code:
Cookie cookie = http.get("http://google.com").cookie("g_user");
String g_user = cookie.value;
or
String source = http.get("http://google.com").body;
My question - To do this, would I need to have a Get class, and a Post class, that are included within the HTTP class and are accessible via accessors?
Within the Get and Post class I would then have the Cookie method, and the body property, and whatever else is needed.
Should I also use an interface, or create a Request class and have Post and Get extend it so that common methods and properties are available to both classes?
Or, am I thinking totally wrong?