Module google_qpxexpress1::api

source ·

Structs§

  • The make, model, and type of an aircraft.
  • An airport.
  • Information about an item of baggage.
  • Information about a carrier (ie. an airline, bus line, railroad, etc) that might be useful to display to an end-user.
  • Information about a city that might be useful to an end-user; typically the city of an airport.
  • Detailed information about components found in the solutions of this response, including a trip’s airport, city, taxes, airline, and aircraft.
  • Complete information about a fare used in the solution to a low-fare search query. In the airline industry a fare is a price an airline charges for one-way travel between two points. A fare typically contains a carrier code, two city codes, a price, and a fare basis. (A fare basis is a one-to-eight character alphanumeric code used to identify a fare.)
  • A flight is a sequence of legs with the same airline carrier and flight number. (A leg is the smallest unit of travel, in the case of a flight a takeoff immediately followed by a landing at two set points on a particular carrier with a particular flight number.) The naive view is that a flight is scheduled travel of an aircraft between two points, with possibly intermediate stops, but carriers will frequently list flights that require a change of aircraft between legs.
  • Information about free baggage allowed on one segment of a trip.
  • Information about a leg. (A leg is the smallest unit of travel, in the case of a flight a takeoff immediately followed by a landing at two set points on a particular carrier with a particular flight number.)
  • The number and type of passengers. Unfortunately the definition of an infant, child, adult, and senior citizen varies across carriers and reservation systems.
  • The price of one or more travel segments. The currency used to purchase tickets is usually determined by the sale/ticketing city or the sale/ticketing country, unless none are specified, in which case it defaults to that of the journey origin country.
  • Central instance to access all QPXExpress related resource activities
  • Details of a segment of a flight; a segment is one or more consecutive legs on the same flight. For example a hypothetical flight ZZ001, from DFW to OGG, would have one segment with two legs: DFW to HNL (leg 1), HNL to OGG (leg 2), and DFW to OGG (legs 1 and 2).
  • The price of this segment.
  • Information about a slice. A slice represents a traveller’s intent, the portion of a low-fare search corresponding to a traveler’s request to get between two points. One-way journeys are generally expressed using 1 slice, round-trips using 2. For example, if a traveler specifies the following trip in a user interface: | Origin | Destination | Departure Date | | BOS | LAX | March 10, 2007 | | LAX | SYD | March 17, 2007 | | SYD | BOS | March 22, 2007 | then this is a three slice trip.
  • Criteria a desired slice must satisfy.
  • Tax data.
  • Tax information.
  • Two times in a single day defining a time range.
  • A builder providing access to all methods supported on trip resources. It is not used directly, but through the QPXExpress hub.
  • Trip information.
  • A QPX Express search request, which will yield one or more solutions.
  • A QPX Express search response.
  • Returns a list of flights.
  • A QPX Express search request.
  • A QPX Express search response.