2019-06-26
2020
#graphql
Sean Smith
3263
Jun 26, 2019 ⋅ 7 min read

GraphQL vs. REST: What you didn’t know

Sean Smith Software engineer.

Recent posts:

Interface Segregation Principle

SOLID series: Understanding the Interface Segregation Principle (ISP)

Discover how the Interface Segregation Principle (ISP) keeps your code lean, modular, and maintainable using real-world analogies and practical examples.

Oyinkansola Awosan
Jun 30, 2025 ⋅ 7 min read
​​How HTML’s Selectedcontent Element Improves Dropdowns

​​How HTML’s <selectedcontent> element improves dropdowns

is an experimental HTML element that gives developers control over how a selected option is displayed, using just HTML and CSS.

Temitope Oyedele
Jun 27, 2025 ⋅ 6 min read
advanced caching in Node.js with Valkey

How to get faster data access in Node.js with Valkey

Learn how to implement an advanced caching layer in a Node.js app using Valkey, a high-performance, Redis-compatible in-memory datastore.

Muhammed Ali
Jun 27, 2025 ⋅ 7 min read
how to properly handle rejected promises in TypeScript

How to properly handle rejected promises in TypeScript

Learn how to properly handle rejected promises in TypeScript using Angular, with tips for retry logic, typed results, and avoiding unhandled exceptions.

Lewis Cianci
Jun 26, 2025 ⋅ 4 min read
View all posts

4 Replies to "GraphQL vs. REST: What you didn’t know"

  1. As you said, I see the pros and cons on both, but as you also mentioned, both have advantages and some cool behaviors.

    I prefer trust on REST APIs for operations such as create/post, update/put and delete/delete.
    But the approach taken for retrieving different sections/resources at once given by GraphQL is nice and it is something that I missed sometime while coding richer on BE/FE applications following strictly REST APIs…

    So… Once it is possible to limit timeouts and max depth queries via GraphQL (https://www.howtographql.com/advanced/4-security/) I think it worth try have balance usage on both approach, and even mix others, like QueryDSL for Java…

    Just to conclude, I have to agree totally that when mixing different approaches sometimes looks a messy and not attractive… Specially if developers look at you traditional REST API and suddenly reaches a resources which is retrieved via GraphQL, looks a bit odd/weird, not to say a Frankstein.

Leave a Reply