API
An API (application programming interface) is a defined way for two software systems to talk to each other and share data or features.
In this guide
What API means
An API is a set of rules that lets one piece of software request something from another. It acts like a messenger: it carries your request to a system, then brings back the response, without you needing to know how that system works inside.
A common comparison is a restaurant waiter. You order from a menu, the waiter takes your request to the kitchen, and brings back your meal. An API does the same between apps - letting your tool ask an AI service for an answer, for example.
Why API matters
APIs are how AI gets connected to the apps you actually use, so the concept is essential for building automations. The good news is that no-code tools handle the technical side for you.
Frequently asked questions
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