All about Application Programming Interfaces (API) explained

August 2, 2019

APIs are usually a set of functions and procedures that allow the creation of applications with access to features or data of an operating system, application, or other services.

An essential component of software design, they exist at every level of the software stack and provide a way to define and manage abstractions by informing us about the working status of software components and how to use it.

Here is how it works - when looking for a product online by choosing variables, for instance, booking a flight, you interact with the airline’s website to access their database and see the seats available for particular those dates and the costs that might be. The API is the interface that, airline’s response to your request and delivers it right back to the online travel service that shows you the most updated, relevant information.

API Design
API design deals with formulating the “what” and “how” you want with software to perform when you push a button. Well-designed APIs have consistent behavior, take their context into account, and keep the needs of their users in mind. As any other piece of productized software, modern API has its own software development lifecycle (SDLC) of designing, testing, building, managing, and versioning with proper documentation for consumption and versioning.

At CoreIT, when we look at API design by taking into context of adhering to commonly accepted best practices for consistency while dealing with external factors.

API as Abstraction Layer
APIs go hand in hand with abstraction, which is a way of organizing the complexity of a system in a simple way. For instance, the abstraction like Amazon Dash Buttons, battery operated, push-button circuit boards etc. are perfect examples of API as abstraction layers.

Modern APIs adhere to standards that are developer-friendly with easy accessibility. API also provides is a layer of security sharing only that, which is necessary for a standardized and stronger discipline for security and governance.

To know more write to CoreIT today

Recent Post

January 12, 2026

Dry January for Your Business: 6 Tech Habits to Quit Cold Turkey

Just like Dry January helps people reset unhealthy habits, businesses need to quit risky tech behaviors that quietly cause damage. This blog outlines six common bad tech habits—ignored updates, reused passwords, admin overload, fragile workarounds, and spreadsheet dependency—and explains how changing systems, not relying on willpower, is the only way to fix them for good.
Read More
January 5, 2026

The One Business Resolution That Actually Sticks (Unlike Your Gym Membership)

Most business technology resolutions fail not because of lack of intent, but because they rely on willpower instead of systems. This blog explains why businesses stay stuck in reactive IT mode and how partnering with an MSP—like hiring a personal trainer—creates accountability, consistency, and proactive prevention. The result: reliable, boring tech that supports growth instead of disrupting it.
Read More
December 22, 2025

Stop Funding These 3 Tech Money Pits – Take Your Family to Hawaii Instead

A practical guide for business owners to identify waste in their tech stack, cut unnecessary software costs, and reclaim thousands in lost productivity and profits.
Read More
© 2025 Core Technologies Services, Inc. All rights reserved.