|  | Posted by John Salerno on 06/16/48 11:39 
David Dorward wrote:> John Salerno wrote:
 >
 >> I probably should have picked up on this by now, but what are "HTTP
 >> headers"? Is that something in the HTML file itself, or is it how the
 >> page is being served (i.e. not easily editable)?
 >
 > The browser makes an HTTP Request to an HTTP server which sends an HTTP
 > Response. This response consists of a number of headers followed by the
 > message body. When requesting HTML documents, the message body consists of
 > the (entire) HTML document.
 >
 > It is generally pretty easy to adjust the headers sent providing you have a
 > reasonable hosting package.
 >
 > That said, XHTML as text/html is silly and XHTML as application/xhtml+xml is
 > badly supported (e.g. IE doesn't try to render it at all. Firefox can't
 > deal with it as well as text/html.)
 >
 > Sticking with HTML 4.01 Strict on the client side is still the best choice
 > in almost every case.
 >
 
 That's what I suspected. The other day I set up application/xhtml+xml on
 my server, so that would be the HTTP Header when an .xhtml file is sent
 back?
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