| All Verbs | /CustomerPreferences/ |
|---|
export class Response
{
public Code: string;
public Message: string;
public constructor(init?: Partial<Response>) { (Object as any).assign(this, init); }
}
export class MarketingPreference
{
public OptInMail: string;
public OptInTelephone: string;
public OptInEmail: string;
public OptInSMS: string;
public TimeStamp: string;
public MMF_Portal_Registered: boolean;
public constructor(init?: Partial<MarketingPreference>) { (Object as any).assign(this, init); }
}
export class CustomerPreferencesResponse
{
public ResponseStatus: Response;
public MarketingPreference: MarketingPreference;
public constructor(init?: Partial<CustomerPreferencesResponse>) { (Object as any).assign(this, init); }
}
export class CustomerPreferencesRequest
{
public BP_ID: string;
public Username: string;
public Token: string;
public Timestamp: string;
public constructor(init?: Partial<CustomerPreferencesRequest>) { (Object as any).assign(this, init); }
}
TypeScript CustomerPreferencesRequest DTOs
To override the Content-type in your clients, use the HTTP Accept Header, append the .jsv suffix or ?format=jsv
The following are sample HTTP requests and responses. The placeholders shown need to be replaced with actual values.
POST /CustomerPreferences/ HTTP/1.1
Host: webservices.mbukdatabase.co.uk
Accept: text/jsv
Content-Type: text/jsv
Content-Length: length
{
BP_ID: String,
Username: String,
Token: String,
Timestamp: String
}
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/jsv
Content-Length: length
{
ResponseStatus:
{
Code: String,
Message: String
},
MarketingPreference:
{
OptInMail: String,
OptInTelephone: String,
OptInEmail: String,
OptInSMS: String,
TimeStamp: String,
MMF_Portal_Registered: False
}
}