Filtering Table Resources
Version 25.3.9411
Version 25.3.9411
Filtering Table Resources
You can use an HTTP GET request to retrieve all table resources, as well as to filter, sort, and restrict the data returned from each table. The path of the URL specifies the set of tables to retrieve. For example, to retrieve all Cars table resources, use the following URL:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars
Single Resource
To retrieve a single resource, make a request to the URL for that resource. To construct the URL, use the desired resource’s primary key. For example:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars('1000')
Some resources might have multiple primary keys, which are indexed as shown in the following example:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars(Id='1000', Date='2024-07-01')
Filtering
Client applications can retrieve multiple resources based on filters provided in the request. Use $filter to write filter requests. For example, a filter to retrieve all resources where Make matches Honda looks like the following:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$filter=Make eq 'Honda'
API Server supports the following logical operators for comparison:
| eq | equal |
| ne | Not equal |
| gt | Greater than |
| ge | Greater than or equal |
| lt | Less than |
| le | Less than or equal |
| not | Negation |
Tip: You can also use and and or to combine filters, as shown in the following example:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$filter=Make eq 'Honda' and Date lt '2024-07-01'
You can also use the startswith, endswith, toupper, tolower, and contains functions with the $filter query option. For example, the following request returns resources with properties that contain the specified substring:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$filter=contains(Make,'Honda')
Selecting Properties
To retrieve a subset of properties, use $select, as shown in the following example:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$select=Id,Model
This returns the Id and Model properties for all resources that match the filter in the request.
You can also retrieve an individual property value for a single resource, as shown in the following example:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars('1000')/Model/$value
Sorting
Use $orderby to sort resources, as shown in the following example:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$orderby=Model asc, Color desc
This returns the resources sorted by Model (ascending), then by Color (descending).
Pagination
Server-Side
API Server supports server-side paging, which you can enable by navigating to Settings > Server-Side Paging Size. When the page-size is greater than 0 and a request returns results larger than the page size, the URL for the next page of results is included in the @odata.nextlink attribute of the response. The last page of results does not include this attribute. This URL includes a paging token which remains valid for the next two minutes. For example, the following response has three resources and an @odata.nextLink attribute containing the URL for the next page of records:
{
"@odata.context": "http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/$metadata#Cars",
"value": [
{ "Id": "Id_1", "Color": "Color_1", "Model": "Model_1"},
{ "Id": "Id_2", "Color": "Color_2", "Model": "Model_2"},
{ "Id": "Id_3", "Color": "Color_3", "Model": "Model_3"}
],
"@odata.nextLink":"http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$skiptoken=0f87696b-aa28-4a70-b13d-c86af8338c80"
}
Client-Side
API Server also supports client-side paging using $top, $skip, and $count.
Use $top=n to include only the first n resources in the result. For example, use the following request to show the top ten Cars resources:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$top=10
Use $skip=n to exclude the first n resources from the result. You can use $top with $skip to implement client-side paging. $skip is always applied before $top, regardless of their order in the query. For example, the following two queries retrieve the first 20 resources in two pages:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$top=10
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$top=10&$skip=10
You can set $count to true to return the total number of records in the results. If you use OData version 2.0 or 3.0, you can set $inlinecount to allpages instead. For example, consider the following query:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$top=3&$skip=4&$count=true
This query might return a response like this:
{
"@odata.context": "http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/$metadata#Cars",
"@odata.count": 402,
"value": [
{ "Id": "Id_1", "Color": "Color_1", "Model": "Model_1"},
{ "Id": "Id_2", "Color": "Color_2", "Model": "Model_2"},
{ "Id": "Id_3", "Color": "Color_3", "Model": "Model_3"}
],
"@odata.nextLink":"http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Account?$skip=7"
}
The total count that matches the filter is returned in the response along with the single page of results.
Count-Only
You can retrieve the count for resources matching a particular filter in the query, as shown in the following example:
http://MyServer:MyPort/api.rsc/Cars?$count=true&$filter=Make eq 'Honda'
The response is a raw count of resources matching the filter in the request.