Units API.

See the Weblate's Web API documentation for detailed description of the API.

GET /api/units/30177/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, PUT, PATCH, DELETE, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "translation": "https://weblate.info.ucl.ac.be/api/translations/cnp3-ebook/principlessecurity/fr/?format=api",
    "source": [
        "Cryptography techniques have initially been defined and used by spies and armies to exchange secret information in manner that ensures that adversaries cannot decode the information even if they capture the message or the person carrying the message. A wide range of techniques have been defined. The first techniques relied on their secrecy to operate. One of the first encryption schemes is attributed to Julius Caesar. When he sent confidential information to his generals, he would encode each message by replacing each letter with another letter that is :math:`n` positions after this letter in the alphabet. For example, the message `SECRET` becomes `VHFUHW` when encoded using Caesar's cipher. This technique could have puzzled some soldiers during Caesar's wars, but today even young kids can recover the original message from the ciphered one."
    ],
    "previous_source": "",
    "target": [
        ""
    ],
    "id_hash": 3183588335239125880,
    "content_hash": 3183588335239125880,
    "location": "../../principles/security.rst:247",
    "context": "",
    "note": "",
    "flags": "",
    "state": 0,
    "fuzzy": false,
    "translated": false,
    "approved": false,
    "position": 18,
    "has_suggestion": false,
    "has_comment": false,
    "has_failing_check": false,
    "num_words": 132,
    "source_unit": "https://weblate.info.ucl.ac.be/api/units/35267/?format=api",
    "priority": 100,
    "id": 30177,
    "web_url": "https://weblate.info.ucl.ac.be/translate/cnp3-ebook/principlessecurity/fr/?checksum=ac2e60b939015b78",
    "url": "https://weblate.info.ucl.ac.be/api/units/30177/?format=api",
    "explanation": "",
    "extra_flags": "",
    "pending": false,
    "timestamp": "2021-08-27T14:43:06.997122+02:00"
}