diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'vendor/github.com/go-openapi/spec/parameter.go')
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-openapi/spec/parameter.go | 42 |
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-openapi/spec/parameter.go b/vendor/github.com/go-openapi/spec/parameter.go index 2b2b89b67..bd4f1cdb0 100644 --- a/vendor/github.com/go-openapi/spec/parameter.go +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-openapi/spec/parameter.go @@ -84,27 +84,27 @@ type ParamProps struct { // Parameter a unique parameter is defined by a combination of a [name](#parameterName) and [location](#parameterIn). // // There are five possible parameter types. -// * Path - Used together with [Path Templating](#pathTemplating), where the parameter value is actually part -// of the operation's URL. This does not include the host or base path of the API. For example, in `/items/{itemId}`, -// the path parameter is `itemId`. -// * Query - Parameters that are appended to the URL. For example, in `/items?id=###`, the query parameter is `id`. -// * Header - Custom headers that are expected as part of the request. -// * Body - The payload that's appended to the HTTP request. Since there can only be one payload, there can only be -// _one_ body parameter. The name of the body parameter has no effect on the parameter itself and is used for -// documentation purposes only. Since Form parameters are also in the payload, body and form parameters cannot exist -// together for the same operation. -// * Form - Used to describe the payload of an HTTP request when either `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` or -// `multipart/form-data` are used as the content type of the request (in Swagger's definition, -// the [`consumes`](#operationConsumes) property of an operation). This is the only parameter type that can be used -// to send files, thus supporting the `file` type. Since form parameters are sent in the payload, they cannot be -// declared together with a body parameter for the same operation. Form parameters have a different format based on -// the content-type used (for further details, consult http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/interact/forms.html#h-17.13.4). -// * `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` - Similar to the format of Query parameters but as a payload. -// For example, `foo=1&bar=swagger` - both `foo` and `bar` are form parameters. This is normally used for simple -// parameters that are being transferred. -// * `multipart/form-data` - each parameter takes a section in the payload with an internal header. -// For example, for the header `Content-Disposition: form-data; name="submit-name"` the name of the parameter is -// `submit-name`. This type of form parameters is more commonly used for file transfers. +// - Path - Used together with [Path Templating](#pathTemplating), where the parameter value is actually part +// of the operation's URL. This does not include the host or base path of the API. For example, in `/items/{itemId}`, +// the path parameter is `itemId`. +// - Query - Parameters that are appended to the URL. For example, in `/items?id=###`, the query parameter is `id`. +// - Header - Custom headers that are expected as part of the request. +// - Body - The payload that's appended to the HTTP request. Since there can only be one payload, there can only be +// _one_ body parameter. The name of the body parameter has no effect on the parameter itself and is used for +// documentation purposes only. Since Form parameters are also in the payload, body and form parameters cannot exist +// together for the same operation. +// - Form - Used to describe the payload of an HTTP request when either `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` or +// `multipart/form-data` are used as the content type of the request (in Swagger's definition, +// the [`consumes`](#operationConsumes) property of an operation). This is the only parameter type that can be used +// to send files, thus supporting the `file` type. Since form parameters are sent in the payload, they cannot be +// declared together with a body parameter for the same operation. Form parameters have a different format based on +// the content-type used (for further details, consult http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/interact/forms.html#h-17.13.4). +// - `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` - Similar to the format of Query parameters but as a payload. +// For example, `foo=1&bar=swagger` - both `foo` and `bar` are form parameters. This is normally used for simple +// parameters that are being transferred. +// - `multipart/form-data` - each parameter takes a section in the payload with an internal header. +// For example, for the header `Content-Disposition: form-data; name="submit-name"` the name of the parameter is +// `submit-name`. This type of form parameters is more commonly used for file transfers. // // For more information: http://goo.gl/8us55a#parameterObject type Parameter struct { |