Doc'd that HttpResponse accepts bytestrings.

This commit is contained in:
Mariusz Felisiak 2019-03-27 12:12:51 +01:00
parent 881362986a
commit e449c3a832
1 changed files with 8 additions and 8 deletions

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@ -631,12 +631,13 @@ Usage
Passing strings
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Typical usage is to pass the contents of the page, as a string, to the
:class:`HttpResponse` constructor::
Typical usage is to pass the contents of the page, as a string or bytestring,
to the :class:`HttpResponse` constructor::
>>> from django.http import HttpResponse
>>> response = HttpResponse("Here's the text of the Web page.")
>>> response = HttpResponse("Text only, please.", content_type="text/plain")
>>> response = HttpResponse(b'Bytestrings are also accepted.')
But if you want to add content incrementally, you can use ``response`` as a
file-like object::
@ -735,16 +736,15 @@ Attributes
Methods
-------
.. method:: HttpResponse.__init__(content='', content_type=None, status=200, reason=None, charset=None)
.. method:: HttpResponse.__init__(content=b'', content_type=None, status=200, reason=None, charset=None)
Instantiates an ``HttpResponse`` object with the given page content and
content type.
``content`` should be an iterator or a string. If it's an
iterator, it should return strings, and those strings will be
joined together to form the content of the response. If it is not
an iterator or a string, it will be converted to a string when
accessed.
``content`` is most commonly an iterator, bytestring, or string. Other
types will be converted to a bytestring by encoding their string
representation. Iterators should return strings or bytestrings and those
will be joined together to form the content of the response.
``content_type`` is the MIME type optionally completed by a character set
encoding and is used to fill the HTTP ``Content-Type`` header. If not