Units API.

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

GET /api/units/31143/?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/protocolsethernet/fr/?format=api",
    "source": [
        "Ethernet was designed in the 1970s at the Palo Alto Research Center [Metcalfe1976]_. The first prototype [#fethernethistory]_ used a coaxial cable as the shared medium and 3 Mbps of bandwidth. Ethernet was improved during the late 1970s and in the 1980s, Digital Equipment, Intel and Xerox published the first official Ethernet specification [DIX]_. This specification defines several important parameters for Ethernet networks. The first decision was to standardize the commercial Ethernet at 10 Mbps. The second decision was the duration of the `slot time`. In Ethernet, a long `slot time` enables networks to span a long distance but forces the host to use a larger minimum frame size. The compromise was a `slot time` of 51.2 microseconds, which corresponds to a minimum frame size of 64 bytes."
    ],
    "previous_source": "",
    "target": [
        ""
    ],
    "id_hash": -3884518692182967514,
    "content_hash": -3884518692182967514,
    "location": "../../protocols/ethernet.rst:12",
    "context": "",
    "note": "",
    "flags": "",
    "state": 0,
    "fuzzy": false,
    "translated": false,
    "approved": false,
    "position": 2,
    "has_suggestion": false,
    "has_comment": false,
    "has_failing_check": false,
    "num_words": 127,
    "source_unit": "https://weblate.info.ucl.ac.be/api/units/36233/?format=api",
    "priority": 100,
    "id": 31143,
    "web_url": "https://weblate.info.ucl.ac.be/translate/cnp3-ebook/protocolsethernet/fr/?checksum=4a176ad49d11bb26",
    "url": "https://weblate.info.ucl.ac.be/api/units/31143/?format=api",
    "explanation": "",
    "extra_flags": "",
    "pending": false,
    "timestamp": "2021-08-27T15:51:49.715726+02:00"
}