vote up 1 vote down star
1

I've got a php script. Most of the time the script returns html, which is working fine, but on one occasion (parameter ?Format=XML) the script returns XML instead of HTML.

Is there any way to change the returned mime type of the php output on the fly from text/html to text/xml or application/xml?

flag

65% accept rate
Can you provide more info about what you're trying to do? i.e. RSS, xhtml etc.? I also found this bug: support.microsoft.com/kb/264868 – joelhardi Sep 30 '08 at 7:16
Make sure you are using the header call before any text is outputted – Eran Galperin Sep 30 '08 at 7:37
Whoah, my mistake, it works in IE - my XML generation code had a big big mistake (I copied it from some tutorial, and didn't really read the output line, which converted the XML into HTML using htmlentities. Sorry!!! – Sam Sep 30 '08 at 9:17
PS.: Since you are wondering, it seems that on SO, the usage is to select the first correct answer... :-) Which is logical. – PhiLho Sep 30 '08 at 9:29
Yeah, seems the best way - even though the other answers contain valid points the first answer is missing (send before any other output, use application/xml instead of text/xml). Thanks! – Sam Sep 30 '08 at 9:37

4 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check
header('Content-type: text/xml');

More information available at the PHP documentation: http://au.php.net/manual/en/function.header.php

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I will answer to the update, since the previous answers are good.
I have read that Internet Explorer is well known for ignoring Mime type headers (most of the time?) to rely on content of the file (which can cause problems in some cases).

Mmm, I did a simple test:

<?php
header('Content-Type: text/xml');
echo '<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<root><foo a="b">Tada</foo></root>';
?>

Internet Explorer 6 displays it correctly as XML. Even if I remove the xml declaration.
You should indicate which version is problematic.

Actually, as I wrote above, with IE (6 at least), you don't even need a content-type, it recognize XML data and display it as a tree. Is your XML correct?

[Update] Tried with IE7 as well, adding ?format=xml too, still displaying XML correctly. If I send malformed XML, IE displays an error. Tested on WinXP Pro SP2+

link|flag
Sorry, my mistake, the example code I copied did sent the XML through htmlentities for output, and I didn't notice until just now! – Sam Sep 30 '08 at 9:21
Ah! OK. :-) We all learn from errors (even those of other people!). – PhiLho Sep 30 '08 at 9:27
I think it's text/xhtml that IE 6 has a problem with; I've never played with it, but I've heard many complaints about it. I believe that IE 6 will simply not work if you send text/xhtml, but I'm not sure. – dirtside Sep 30 '08 at 14:34
One type IE has problems with is XHTML, which is application/xhtml+xml or application/xml -- IE does not render XHTML sent with either of these correct content-types (you can incorrectly send as text/html to force IE to use its HTML mode, but this is wrong and can cause other side effects). – joelhardi Sep 30 '08 at 18:13
vote up 1 vote down

You should send a Content-Type header before you send any output header('Content-Type: text/xml');

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Set the Content-Type header:

header('Content-Type: text/xml');

Though you should probably use "application/xml" instead.

link|flag
You got me - what is the difference between text/xml and application/xml, though? – Sam Sep 30 '08 at 7:11
Interactions between text/* content types HTTP regarding encoding, mainly: see annevankesteren.nl/2005/03/text-xml – John Millikin Sep 30 '08 at 7:33

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.