Test

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HelloWithDataContract

import java.math.*;
import java.util.*;
import net.servicestack.client.*;
import com.google.gson.annotations.*;
import com.google.gson.reflect.*;

public class dtos
{

    @DataContract
    public static class HelloWithDataContract
    {
        @DataMember(Name="name", Order=1, IsRequired=true, EmitDefaultValue=false)
        @SerializedName("name")
        public String name = null;

        @DataMember(Name="id", Order=2, EmitDefaultValue=false)
        @SerializedName("id")
        public Integer id = null;
        
        public String getName() { return name; }
        public HelloWithDataContract setName(String value) { this.name = value; return this; }
        public Integer getId() { return id; }
        public HelloWithDataContract setId(Integer value) { this.id = value; return this; }
    }

    @DataContract
    public static class HelloWithDataContractResponse
    {
        @DataMember(Name="result", Order=1, IsRequired=true, EmitDefaultValue=false)
        @SerializedName("result")
        public String result = null;
        
        public String getResult() { return result; }
        public HelloWithDataContractResponse setResult(String value) { this.result = value; return this; }
    }

}

Java HelloWithDataContract DTOs

To override the Content-type in your clients, use the HTTP Accept Header, append the .json suffix or ?format=json

To embed the response in a jsonp callback, append ?callback=myCallback

HTTP + JSON

The following are sample HTTP requests and responses. The placeholders shown need to be replaced with actual values.

POST /json/reply/HelloWithDataContract HTTP/1.1 
Host: test.servicestack.net 
Accept: application/json
Content-Type: application/json
Content-Length: length

{"name":"String"}
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
Content-Length: length

{"result":"String"}