REST framework includes an abstraction for dealing with resources, that allows the developer to concentrate on modelling the state and interactions of the API, and leave the URL construction to be handled automatically, based on common conventions.
To work with resources, we can use either the `Resource` class, which does not define any default handlers, or the `ModelResource` class, which provides a default set of CRUD operations.
Resource classes are very similar to class based views, except that they provide operations such as `read`, or `update`, and not HTTP method handlers such as `get` or `put`. Resources are only bound to HTTP method handlers at the last moment, when they are instantiated into views, typically by using a `Router` class which handles the complexities of defining the URL conf for you.
Our `UserResource` is simple, since we just want the default model CRUD behavior, so we inherit from `ModelResource` and include the same set of attributes we used for the corresponding view classes.
Notice that we've used the `@link` decorator for the `highlight` endpoint. This decorator can be used for non-CRUD endpoints that are "safe" operations that do not change server state. Using `@link` indicates that we want to use a `GET` method for these operations. For non-CRUD operations we can also use the `@action` decorator for any operations that change server state, which ensures that the `POST` method will be used for the operation.
Right now that hasn't really saved us a lot of code. However, now that we're using Resources rather than Views, we actually don't need to design the urlconf ourselves. The conventions for wiring up resources into views and urls can be handled automatically, using `Router` classes. All we need to do is register the appropriate resources with a router, and let it do the rest. Here's our re-wired `urls.py` file.
Writing resource-oriented code can be a good thing. It helps ensure that URL conventions will be consistent across your APIs, minimises the amount of code you need to write, and allows you to concentrate on the interactions and representations your API provides rather than the specifics of the URL conf.
That doesn't mean it's always the right approach to take. There's a similar set of trade-offs to consider as when using class-based views. Using resources is less explicit than building your views individually.