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Media typesAn Internet media type is, generally speaking, a property of a data set, describing both the general type of data (such as "text" or "image" or "application"; the last one refers to program-specific internal data formats) and, as a subtype, a specific format for the data. The concept was originally defined as "MIME content types". Media types relate to HTML as follows:
The
HTML 3.2 Reference Specification
refers to RFC 1521
but that specification was superseded by
RFC 2046
(in November 1996).
The procedure for registering types in given in
RFC 2048;
according to
it, the registry is kept at
For less authoritative but more readably presented information, see document MIME Types by Chris Herborth. In addition to standardized media types, there are media types which are in fact supported by popular servers and browsers. Appendix B of Special Edition Using CGI lists many of them.
You can check what is the media type information sent by a server
as follows:
Assuming we are interested in the media type of the document at
URL
beta ~ 51 % telnet www.hut.fi 80 Trying 130.233.224.28... Connected to info-e.hut.fi. Escape character is '^]'. HEAD /home/jkorpela/perhe.jpg HTTP/1.0 HTTP/1.1 200 OK Date: Tue, 23 Sep 1997 12:37:05 GMT Server: Apache/1.2.4 Last-Modified: Tue, 08 Aug 1995 08:29:53 GMT ETag: "16391-9232-30272081" Content-Length: 37426 Accept-Ranges: bytes Connection: close Content-Type: image/jpeg Connection closed by foreign host. beta ~ 52 % exitHere the Content-Type: field tells that the media type
is image/jpeg.
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