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Table Of Contents  The TCP/IP Guide
 9  TCP/IP Application Layer Protocols, Services and Applications (OSI Layers 5, 6 and 7)
      9  TCP/IP Key Applications and Application Protocols
           9  TCP/IP File and Message Transfer Applications and Protocols (FTP, TFTP, Electronic Mail, USENET, HTTP/WWW, Gopher)
                9  TCP/IP World Wide Web (WWW, "The Web") and the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)
                     9  TCP/IP Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)
                          9  HTTP Entities, Transfers, Coding Methods and Content Management

Previous Topic/Section
HTTP Data Length Issues, "Chunked" Transfers and Message Trailers
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Pages in Current Topic/Section
12
3
Next Page
HTTP Features, Capabilities and Issues
Next Topic/Section

HTTP Content Negotiation and "Quality Values"
(Page 3 of 3)

Weighting Preferences with "Quality Values"

Even better than simple acceptance lists, HTTP allows the client to weight each of the items in such a list, to indicate which is preferred of the alternatives. This is done by adding a decimal quality value after each parameter using the syntax “q=<value>”, which represents the relative priority of that parameter relative to others. The highest priority is 1 and the lowest is 0; the default if no value is indicated is 1, while a value of 0 means the client is specifically saying it is not willing to accept documents with that characteristic.

This is best illustrated by an example, so let’s take our trilingual friend again. This time, let’s say she knows English, French and Spanish, but her French is a bit rusty (she hasn’t used it in a while). Furthermore, she may need to share this document with a friend of hers who only knows a little Spanish, so it would be best if she got the document in English. Finally, she knows there is a German version of the resource that she definitely does not want. This could be represented as follows:

Accept-Language: en, fr;q=0.3, sp;q=0.7, de;q=0

Translated to English, this means “I prefer if you sent me the document in English. If not, Spanish is okay, or French if that is all you have, but definitely don’t send it in German”.

Incidentally, the name “quality value” is the one used in the HTTP standard, but is really a poor choice of terminology (which, to be fair, is also mentioned in the standard!) These values do not really have anything to do with quality; for all we know, the German version of this document may be the original and the others could be lousy translations. The “q” values only specify the relative preference of the client making the request.

Finally, the “*” wildcard can be used in the Accept family of headers to represent “any value”, or “everything else”. This is often used to tell the server “if you can’t find what I specifically asked for, then here’s my preference level on the alternatives”. Let’s take an example using the Accept header:

Accept: text/html, text/*;q=0.6, */*;q=0.1

This header represents the client saying “My preference (q=1) is an HTML text document. If not available, I would prefer some other type of text document. Failing that, you may send me any other type of document relevant to the requested resource.”

Key Concept: Server-driven content negotiation is the type most often used in HTTP. A client sending a request can include up to four different headers that provide information about how the server should fill its request. These may include optional quality values that specify the client’s relative preference amongst a set of alternative resource characteristics such as media type, language, character set or encoding.


 


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HTTP Data Length Issues, "Chunked" Transfers and Message Trailers
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HTTP Features, Capabilities and Issues
Next Topic/Section

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Version 3.0 - Version Date: September 20, 2005

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