This repository contains the public preview of the OpenAPI 3.1 specification for Discord's API. Currently, the spec is only available for the most recent Discord API version (v10).
⚠️ The public preview of the OpenAPI spec is subject to breaking changes without advance notice, and should not be used within production environments.
Two versions of the spec are included—the standard spec and the preview spec:
openapi.json
is the standard spec that contains the stable, public API.openapi_preview.json
is the preview spec which contains unstable and/or experimental API features. This should not be considered stable or used in production environments.
To use the spec with Postman, you can view the public collection.
OpenAPI spec contents are automatically generated, and therefore we do not allow public contributions to this repo.
🐛 For bug fixes or improvements, you can open an issue.
- This is a preview and it may be not correct. If you find discrepancies between the spec and our docs, other than the ones mentioned below, let us know, and follow the docs, not the spec.
- Even though we define
anyOf
andoneOf
unions, they all mean that only one type from the list can be used as a data format. E.g.anyOf: {'Cat', 'Dog'}
, still means that you can either passCat
orDog
, notCat Dog
. This is signified by the custom extensionx-discord-union: oneOf
. We useanyOf
when we technically can’t useoneOf
. One of the reasons to do that is e.g. when all the fields are optional and the passed in data could be validated with more than one format. - We avoid over-specifying response fields and merely define field types, like
int32
, and we avoid defining specific minimums, maximums, etc. - Some fields typed as strings in our docs may be typed as ints in the spec. Our API accepts strings for int fields if they are parseable as ints. We think it’ll be more precise to spec these int-parseable strings as ints.
- (almost) All nullable fields are additionally marked as optional and all optional fields are additionally marked as nullable.
- Operations and fields don’t have descriptions.
- Operations don’t have tags.
- Flag fields don’t detail specific flag values and their meaning.
- Optional query args are typed as nullable, even though it doesn’t make much sense.