What Are Controllers in Nest.js
メニューを表示するにはスワイプしてください
Controllers are responsible for handling incoming requests and returning responses.
When a client sends a request to your server, the controller receives it and decides what should happen next.
In Nest.js, controllers are defined using decorators. A decorator tells Nest how a class or method should behave.
For example:
import { Controller, Get } from '@nestjs/common';
@Controller('users')
export class UsersController {
@Get()
getAllUsers() {
return 'List of users';
}
}
In this example:
@Controller('users'): defines the base route;@Get(): handles GET requests;getAllUsers(): returns a response.
When you open /users in the browser, this method is executed.
Controllers should stay simple. Their job is to:
- Receive the request;
- Call the appropriate logic;
- Return a response.
They should not contain complex logic. That logic belongs in services.
フィードバックありがとうございます!
AIに質問する
AIに質問する
何でも質問するか、提案された質問の1つを試してチャットを始めてください
What Are Controllers in Nest.js
Controllers are responsible for handling incoming requests and returning responses.
When a client sends a request to your server, the controller receives it and decides what should happen next.
In Nest.js, controllers are defined using decorators. A decorator tells Nest how a class or method should behave.
For example:
import { Controller, Get } from '@nestjs/common';
@Controller('users')
export class UsersController {
@Get()
getAllUsers() {
return 'List of users';
}
}
In this example:
@Controller('users'): defines the base route;@Get(): handles GET requests;getAllUsers(): returns a response.
When you open /users in the browser, this method is executed.
Controllers should stay simple. Their job is to:
- Receive the request;
- Call the appropriate logic;
- Return a response.
They should not contain complex logic. That logic belongs in services.
フィードバックありがとうございます!