https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25901279
Note that there are several API searches from 3 years ago that are still open, including this Big List question.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25901279
Note that there are several API searches from 3 years ago that are still open, including this Big List question.
Asking for accessible APIs is just as problematic as asking for a recommendation of software.
The primary skill used for this is random familiarity or your favorite search engine.
Consider the hypothetical "Looking for a lunar phase api" question. Well, if you know of one, you'd recommend it. If you don't, you'd toss "json moon phase" into google and get back things like http://www.wunderground.com/weather/api/d/docs?d=data/astronomy which then would result in answers like:
Try Weather Underground's API for astronomy at http://www.wunderground.com/weather/api/d/docs?d=data/astronomy
The reason that software recommendations are off topic here is because they generate crap answers. Asking for APIs is no different in its likelihood of generating crap answers.
Therefore, it should remain off topic just like asking for a program to send arbitrary json requests would be.
Note that they are on topic on Software Recommendations.SE (Meta.SR.SE Are web API recommendations on-topic?). Given that they are on topic there, that would likely make them off topic anywhere where software recommendations are off topic. See: Free web API to query “Google” hits or similar for an example API question on Software Recommendations.SE.
I recognize the pattern, seen a lot of it lately. Roughly categorized as the "Can you Google this for me?" questions. Not uncommonly introduced with the "Does anybody know?" phrase.
Well, yes, pretty sure that Jon Skeet could google it. Pretty sure he won't.
We've got a decent Off Topic selection reason for these questions. Let's use it while it lasts.