//! This example illustrates the way to send and receive statically typed JSON. //! //! In contrast to the arbitrary JSON example, this brings up the full power of //! Rust compile-time type system guaranties though it requires a little bit //! more code. // These require the `serde` dependency. use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize}; #[derive(Debug, Serialize, Deserialize)] struct Post { id: Option, title: String, body: String, #[serde(rename = "userId")] user_id: i32, } // This is using the `tokio` runtime. You'll need the following dependency: // // `tokio = { version = "1", features = ["full"] }` #[tokio::main] async fn main() -> Result<(), rquest::Error> { let new_post = Post { id: None, title: "rquest.rs".into(), body: "https://docs.rs/rquest".into(), user_id: 1, }; let new_post: Post = rquest::Client::new() .post("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts") .json(&new_post) .send() .await? .json() .await?; println!("{:#?}", new_post); // Post { // id: Some( // 101 // ), // title: "rquest.rs", // body: "https://docs.rs/rquest", // user_id: 1 // } Ok(()) }