| POST | /bettors/update |
|---|
"use strict";
export class Reference {
/** @param {{id?:string,value?:string}} [init] */
constructor(init) { Object.assign(this, init) }
/** @type {string} */
id;
/** @type {string} */
value;
}
export class Address {
/** @param {{street?:string,city?:Reference,postalCode?:string}} [init] */
constructor(init) { Object.assign(this, init) }
/** @type {string} */
street;
/** @type {Reference} */
city;
/** @type {string} */
postalCode;
}
export class UpdateBettor {
/** @param {{id?:string,fullName?:string,dateOfBirth?:string,bettorAddress?:Address,email?:string,phoneNumber?:string,username?:string,bankTransactionAccountNumber?:string}} [init] */
constructor(init) { Object.assign(this, init) }
/** @type {string} */
id;
/** @type {string} */
fullName;
/** @type {string} */
dateOfBirth;
/** @type {Address} */
bettorAddress;
/** @type {string} */
email;
/** @type {string} */
phoneNumber;
/** @type {string} */
username;
/** @type {string} */
bankTransactionAccountNumber;
}
To override the Content-type in your clients, use the HTTP Accept Header, append the .jsv suffix or ?format=jsv
The following are sample HTTP requests and responses. The placeholders shown need to be replaced with actual values.
POST /bettors/update HTTP/1.1
Host: fbihtaapi.bettor.webhop.biz
Accept: text/jsv
Content-Type: text/jsv
Content-Length: length
{
id: String,
fullName: String,
dateOfBirth: 0001-01-01,
bettorAddress:
{
street: String,
city:
{
id: String,
value: String
},
postalCode: String
},
email: String,
phoneNumber: String,
username: String,
bankTransactionAccountNumber: String
}
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/jsv
Content-Length: length
{
errorCode: String,
message: String,
stackTrace: String,
errors:
[
{
errorCode: String,
fieldName: String,
message: String,
meta:
{
String: String
}
}
],
meta:
{
String: String
}
}