Added 'Setting headers' and 'Telling the browser to treat the response as a file attachment' sections to docs/request_response.txt

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@7510 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Adrian Holovaty 2008-04-30 00:03:45 +00:00
parent db6bab5cb3
commit 1dee309198
1 changed files with 22 additions and 1 deletions

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@ -402,6 +402,27 @@ hard-coded strings. If you use this technique, follow these guidelines:
content, you can't use the ``HttpResponse`` instance as a file-like
object. Doing so will raise ``Exception``.
Setting headers
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To set a header in your response, just treat it like a dictionary::
>>> response = HttpResponse()
>>> response['Pragma'] = 'no-cache'
Telling the browser to treat the response as a file attachment
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To tell the browser to treat the response as a file attachment, use the
``mimetype`` argument and set the ``Content-Disposition`` header. For example,
this is how you might return a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet::
>>> response = HttpResponse(my_data, mimetype='application/vnd.ms-excel')
>>> response['Content-Disposition'] = 'attachment; filename=foo.xls'
There's nothing Django-specific about the ``Content-Disposition`` header, but
it's easy to forget the syntax, so we've included it here.
Methods
-------
@ -420,7 +441,7 @@ Methods
but since this is actually the value included in the HTTP ``Content-Type``
header, it can also include the character set encoding, which makes it
more than just a MIME type specification. If ``mimetype`` is specified
(not None), that value is used. Otherwise, ``content_type`` is used. If
(not ``None``), that value is used. Otherwise, ``content_type`` is used. If
neither is given, the ``DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE`` setting is used.
``__setitem__(header, value)``