Mantieni tutto organizzato con le raccolte
Salva e classifica i contenuti in base alle tue preferenze.
L'API Google Ads può essere chiamata tramite gRPC o REST. Entrambe le interfacce espongono un design orientato alle risorse condiviso con altre API Google Cloud.
Se possibile, ti consigliamo di utilizzare le librerie client ufficiali di Google. Forniscono codice idiomatico e sicuro per il testo in ogni lingua supportata e gestiscono molti dettagli di basso livello della comunicazione con l'API (ad esempio le impostazioni di timeout, l'impaginazione dell'insieme di risultati e l'autenticazione). Le nostre librerie client includono anche un ampio insieme di esempi di codice e utilità che supportano attività comuni, come la creazione di nomi di risorse e la gestione di mask di campo.
Questa guida presenta dettagli specifici di REST e spiega ciò che devi sapere per chiamare direttamente l'interfaccia REST, senza utilizzare una libreria client supportata da Google. Questa guida può essere utile se stai scrivendo il tuo codice personalizzato per utilizzare direttamente REST o una libreria client HTTP di terze parti.
[null,null,["Ultimo aggiornamento 2025-08-27 UTC."],[[["\u003cp\u003eGoogle Ads API can be accessed using either gRPC or REST, with gRPC being the recommended method for interacting with the API.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eOfficial Google client libraries, built on gRPC (except for Perl which uses REST), are strongly encouraged for ease of use and handling low-level communication details.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eThis guide focuses on using the REST interface directly, primarily for users building custom solutions or using third-party HTTP client libraries.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eClient libraries provide benefits like idiomatic code, type safety, pagination handling, authentication, and access to code examples and utilities for common tasks.\u003c/p\u003e\n"]]],["The Google Ads API utilizes gRPC or REST interfaces, sharing a resource-oriented design. Using Google's client libraries is highly recommended for type-safe code, handling communication details like timeouts, pagination, and authentication. The official client libraries use gRPC, except for the Perl library, which uses REST. This guide details using REST directly without client libraries, useful for custom code or third-party HTTP clients. It focuses on information outside of what the official client libraries cover.\n"],null,["# REST Interface\n\n| **Key Point:** We strongly recommend using our [official client\n| libraries](/google-ads/api/docs/client-libs) wherever you can. All Google provided client libraries are implemented using gRPC, except for the [Perl\n| library](https://github.com/googleads/google-ads-perl/), which uses the REST interface. Unless you are specifically looking for details about REST, consult the [gRPC documentation](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc) for reference documentation that covers our official client libraries.\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\nThe Google Ads API can be called either using [gRPC](//grpc.io/) or REST. Both\ninterfaces expose a [resource-oriented design](//cloud.google.com/apis/design)\nshared with other Google Cloud APIs.\n\nWe recommend using Google's official [client libraries](/google-ads/api/docs/client-libs)\nwherever possible. They provide idiomatic, type-safe code in each supported\nlanguage and handle many low-level details of communication with the API (like\ntimeout settings, result set [pagination](/google-ads/api/rest/examples#paginated), and\n[authentication](/google-ads/api/rest/auth)). Our client libraries also include an\nextensive set of [code examples](/google-ads/api/docs/samples) and utilities that assist with\ncommon tasks, such as constructing\n[resource names](/google-ads/api/rest/design/resource-names) and handling\n[field masks](/google-ads/api/rest/common/mutate#update).\n\nThis guide presents details specific to REST and explains what you need to know\nto call the REST interface directly, without the use of a Google-supported\nclient library. This guide may be useful if you are writing your own custom code\nto use REST directly or using a third-party HTTP client library."]]