▲ | zimpenfish a day ago | |
> If you use the same struct in both an HTTP API and an ORM, you're Doing It Wrong in my opinion. If you mean "public API", yep, 100% agree. Internal API between microservices though? Perfectly safe and cromulent, I'd say. | ||
▲ | CactusRocket 12 hours ago | parent [-] | |
I tend to disagree with that, also. :) Even within one codebase there's immense value in having separate structs/classes per "layer" or domain. E.g. a different set of structs for the database layer than for the "business layer" (or whatever your application's internal setup is). When that boundary is moved to outside the application, so an HTTP API between microservices, I feel even more strongly (though indeed still not as strongly as in what you call a "public API"). E.g. I have seen plenty of times a situation where a bunch of applications were managed within one team, the team split up and now this "internal API" has become an API between teams, suddenly making it "public" (when viewed from the teams perspective). |