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Home/ Questions/Q 6724801
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T09:43:56+00:00 2026-05-26T09:43:56+00:00

Currently reading Bloch’s Effective Java (2nd Edition) and he makes a point to state,

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Currently reading Bloch’s Effective Java (2nd Edition) and he makes a point to state, in bold, that overusing POSTs in web applications is inherently bad. Unfortunately, he doesn’t specify why.

This startled me, because when I do any web development, all I ever use are POSTs! I have always steered clear of GETs for security reasons and because it felt more professional (long, unsightly URLs always bother me for some reason).

Are there performance differentials between GET and POST? Can anyone elaborate on why overusing POSTs is bad, and why? My understanding – and preliminary searches – seem to all indicate that these two are handles very similarly by the web server. Thanks in advance!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T09:43:56+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 9:43 am

    You should use HTTP as it’s supposed to be used.

    GET should be used for idempotent, read queries (i.e. view an item, search for a product, etc.).

    POST should be used for create, delete or update requests (i.e. delete an item, update a profile, etc.)

    GET allows refreshing the page, bookmark it, send the URL to someone. POST doesn’t allow that. A useful pattern is post/redirect/get (AKA redirect after post).

    Note that, except for long search forms, GET URLs should be short. They should usually look like http://www.foo.com/app/product/view?productId=1245, or even http://www.foo.com/app/product/view/1245

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