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I don't? It's fine. I'm also fine just adding an 's' to many words that have unusual plurals; English is flexible, and "persons" is a perfectly acceptable substitute for "people".

That said, I don't love your example. Staff does have a plural, staffs - as in, the separate staffs of multiple organizations.



what's your opinion of using suffix like '_list' to differentiate it ?

ie:

GET /species

and

GET /species_list

?


Seems weird.

Of all the rules, #1 one is by far the most arbitrary and least important. But it's also a thoroughly established convention. If you want to present "this is a normal, boring API with few surprises" to your clients, I wouldn't recommend odd collection suffixes.

But it's not going to fundamentally change the usability of your API, unlike many of the other rules.


The case of having a singular at the end of a GET is so rare that it should be easy to disambiguate. I have a project where one of the main objects is a "series", it's clear what "GET /series" and "GET /series/ID" means to anyone that has seen a REST API.




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