HTTP Accept Header meaning

mckamey picture mckamey · Mar 16, 2011 · Viewed 45.8k times · Source

When a browser's Accept request header says something like the following:

Accept: application/xml,application/xhtml+xml,text/html;q=0.9,text/plain;q=0.8,image/png,*/*;q=0.5

Does that mean that application/xml, application/xhtml+xml, and text/html all have a quality param of 0.9?

Or does it mean that application/xml and application/xhtml+xml have the default (q=1) and text/html has the q=0.9 param?

I'm assuming the former, but was hoping someone knew more definitively.

Answer

Gumbo picture Gumbo · Mar 16, 2011

No, if the quality parameter is missing q=1.0 is assumed:

Each media-range MAY be followed by one or more accept-params, beginning with the "q" parameter for indicating a relative quality factor […] using the qvalue scale from 0 to 1 (section 3.9). The default value is q=1.

So the given value is to be interpreted as: “application/xml, application/xhtml+xml, and image/png are the preferred media types, but if they don’t exist, then send the text/html entity (text/html;q=0.9), and if that doesn’t exist, then send the text/plain entity (text/plain;q=0.8), and if that doesn’t exist, send an entity with any other media type (*/*;q=0.5).”