From the wiki excerpts, I don't see any difference between restful-url and rest.
1 Answer
Instead of synonymizing restful-url with rest I am in favor of burniating this tag instead and replace it with url-design as most questions tagged with restful-url are asking for which URI expresses the designers intent the best.
In a through and through REST architecture clients shouldn't care about the URI/URL at all as it will ship with an accompanying link relation name expressing the intent of it and a client should base its decision whether to invoke the URI on that link-relation name. Even Fielding himself claimed that most of the design effort should be put into defining/designin media-types and meaningful link-relation names instead of overengineering URIs. Further, the URI itself is just a pointer as a whole. There is no automatic parent-child relationship involved in the structure of the URI. Multiple URIs, however, can form a tree that may seem like a parent-child relationship though.
The idea behind this approach is clearly to allow the server to change its internal structure any time it wants. Clients interpreting, or even hardcoding, such URIs will have a hard time with interacting with such an API further, while clients invoking just the URI related to a certain meaningful link-relation name will have no problems with such changes.
As already claimed in my comment an URI remains an URI regardless if it is used in a REST API or not. There is therefore no such thing as a RESTful-URL or NON-RESTful-URL IMO, hence my support to burniate this tag.
restful-url
to rest.