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multipart http
content-type multipart/form-data boundary=
content-type multipart/alternative boundary=
multipart/related vs multipart/mixed
multipart definition
multipart/related example
multipart content type example
http multipart response
7 Sep 2015 I've also made it possible to configure default subtype using the MultiPartConfig . For example if you want to use "multipart/mixed" for all request
File uploads typically use the multipart/form-data media type, and mixed-data requests usually use The example above corresponds to the following request:
8 Jun 2004 The multipart/alternative content type is used when the same information is For example, a message that consists of a heavily formatted to allow information providers to express file upload requests uniformly, and to
Network Working Group L. Masinter Request for Comments: 2388 Xerox Masinter Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 2388 multipart/form-data August 1998 3. For example, a part might contain a header: Content-Disposition: form-data; the result of a single form entry, they should be represented as a "multipart/mixed" part
7 Jun 2013 HTML forms do not support sending data as multipart/mixed . The closest This is what a request with a multi-file browse control looks like:.
Can someone please explain the difference between these two mime types? I see Jersey-multipart defaults to multipart/mixed but it isn't clear to me what this provides over multipart/form-data which is more common in the HTML world (and probably has better support).
The example is 'shamelessly' taken from RFC 1867. Trying to upload multiple files in one field name of form which seems will be supported by mozilla in the
Network Working Group L. Masinter Request for Comments: 2388 Xerox This specification defines an Internet Media Type, multipart/form- data, which can be used For example, a part might contain a header: Content-Disposition: form-data; of a single form entry, they should be represented as a "multipart/mixed" part
Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) is an Internet standard that extends the format of Some of these viewers are built into the Web client or browser (for example, almost all browsers come . MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="frontier" This is a message with multiple parts in MIME format.
A gateway between Internet and X.400 mail, for example, must be able to tell the Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="gc0p4Jq0M2Yt08jU534c0p"
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