REST API: Population & Field Selection
The REST API by default does not populate any relations, media fields, components, or dynamic zones. Use the populate
parameter to populate specific fields and the select
parameter to return only specific fields with the query results.
Strapi takes advantage of the ability of the qs
library to parse nested objects to create more complex queries.
Use qs
directly to generate complex queries instead of creating them manually. Examples in this documentation showcase how you can use qs
.
You can also use the interactive query builder if you prefer playing with our online tool instead of generating queries with qs
on your machine.
Strapi v4 docs very recently included a more extensive description of how to use the populate
parameter, including an extensive API reference and additional guides. These v4 pages are currently being ported and adapted to Strapi 5 docs so that examples reflect the new data response format.
In the meantime, you can trust the content of the present page as accurate as it already reflects the new Strapi 5, flattened response format (see breaking change entry and REST API introduction for details); the present page is just not as complete as its v4 equivalent yet.
Field selection
Queries can accept a fields
parameter to select only some fields. By default, only the following types of fields are returned:
- string types: string, text, richtext, enumeration, email, password, and uid,
- date types: date, time, datetime, and timestamp,
- number types: integer, biginteger, float, and decimal,
- generic types: boolean, array, and JSON.
Use case | Example parameter syntax |
---|---|
Select a single field | fields=name |
Select multiple fields | fields[0]=name&fields[1]=description |
Field selection does not work on relational, media, component, or dynamic zone fields. To populate these fields, use the populate
parameter.
GET /api/restaurants?fields[0]=name&fields[1]=description
JavaScript query (built with the qs library):
The query URL above was built using the qs
library.
qs
can be run locally on your machine, as shown in the following code example, or you can use our interactive query builder online tool.
const qs = require('qs');
const query = qs.stringify(
{
fields: ['name', 'description'],
},
{
encodeValuesOnly: true, // prettify URL
}
);
await request(`/api/users?${query}`);
{
"data": [
{
"id": 4,
"Name": "Pizzeria Arrivederci",
"Description": [
{
"type": "paragraph",
"children": [
{
"type": "text",
"text": "Specialized in pizza, we invite you to rediscover our classics, such as 4 Formaggi or Calzone, and our original creations such as Do Luigi or Nduja."
}
]
}
],
"documentId": "lr5wju2og49bf820kj9kz8c3"
},
// …
],
"meta": {
"pagination": {
"page": 1,
"pageSize": 25,
"pageCount": 1,
"total": 4
}
}
}
Population
The REST API by default does not populate any type of fields, so it will not populate relations, media fields, components, or dynamic zones unless you pass a populate
parameter to populate various field types.
The populate
parameter can be used alone or in combination with with multiple operators to have much more control over the population.
The find
permission must be enabled for the content-types that are being populated. If a role doesn't have access to a content-type it will not be populated (see User Guide for additional information on how to enable find
permissions for content-types).
It's currently not possible to return just an array of ids with a request.
The REST API guides section includes more detailed information about various possible use cases for the populate parameter:
- The Understanding populate guide explains in details how populate works, with diagrams, comparisons, and real-world examples.
- The How to populate creator fields guide provides step-by-step instructions on how to add
createdBy
andupdatedBy
fields to your queries responses.
The following table sums up possible populate use cases and their associated parameter syntaxes, and links to sections of the Understanding populate guide which includes more detailed explanations:
Use case | Example parameter syntax | Detailed explanations to read |
---|---|---|
Populate everything, 1 level deep, including media fields, relations, components, and dynamic zones | populate=* | Populate all relations and fields, 1 level deep |
Populate one relation, 1 level deep | populate=a-relation-name | Populate 1 level deep for specific relations |
Populate several relations, 1 level deep | populate[0]=relation-name&populate[1]=another-relation-name&populate[2]=yet-another-relation-name | Populate 1 level deep for specific relations |
Populate some relations, several levels deep | populate[root-relation-name][populate][0]=nested-relation-name | Populate several levels deep for specific relations |
Populate a component | populate[0]=component-name | Populate components |
Populate a component and one of its nested components | populate[0]=component-name&populate[1]=component-name.nested-component-name | Populate components |
Populate a dynamic zone (only its first-level elements) | populate[0]=dynamic-zone-name | Populate dynamic zones |
Populate a dynamic zone and its nested elements and relations, using a precisely defined, detailed population strategy | populate[dynamic-zone-name][on][component-category.component-name][populate][relation-name][populate][0]=field-name | Populate dynamic zones |
The easiest way to build complex queries with multiple-level population is to use our interactive query builder tool.
Combining Population with other operators
By utilizing the populate
operator it is possible to combine other operators such as field selection, filters, and sort in the population queries.
The population and pagination operators cannot be combined.
Populate with field selection
fields
and populate
can be combined.
GET /api/articles?fields[0]=title&fields[1]=slug&populate[headerImage][fields][0]=name&populate[headerImage][fields][1]=url
JavaScript query (built with the qs library):
The query URL above was built using the qs
library.
qs
can be run locally on your machine, as shown in the following code example, or you can use our interactive query builder online tool.
const qs = require('qs');
const query = qs.stringify(
{
fields: ['title', 'slug'],
populate: {
headerImage: {
fields: ['name', 'url'],
},
},
},
{
encodeValuesOnly: true, // prettify URL
}
);
await request(`/api/articles?${query}`);
{
"data": [
{
"id": 1,
"documentId": "h90lgohlzfpjf3bvan72mzll",
"title": "Test Article",
"slug": "test-article",
"headerImage": {
"id": 1,
"documentId": "cf07g1dbusqr8mzmlbqvlegx",
"name": "17520.jpg",
"url": "/uploads/17520_73c601c014.jpg"
}
}
],
"meta": {
// ...
}
}
Populate with filtering
filters
and populate
can be combined.
GET /api/articles?populate[categories][sort][0]=name%3Aasc&populate[categories][filters][name][$eq]=Cars
JavaScript query (built with the qs library):
The query URL above was built using the qs
library.
qs
can be run locally on your machine, as shown in the following code example, or you can use our interactive query builder online tool.
const qs = require('qs');
const query = qs.stringify(
{
populate: {
categories: {
sort: ['name:asc'],
filters: {
name: {
$eq: 'Cars',
},
},
},
},
},
{
encodeValuesOnly: true, // prettify URL
}
);
await request(`/api/articles?${query}`);
{
"data": [
{
"id": 1,
"documentId": "a1b2c3d4e5d6f7g8h9i0jkl",
"title": "Test Article",
// ...
"categories": {
"data": [
{
"id": 2,
"documentId": "jKd8djla9ndalk98hflj3",
"name": "Cars"
// ...
}
]
}
}
}
],
"meta": {
// ...
}
}