I think all the previous answers are misleading a bit, although some of them are correct, and the most precise one is not formatted enough to highlight the problem. Other did not mention explicitly that there are two different headers, so the answers which suggested to use request.format
put you in a very risky situation of checking the wrong thing.
First of all, Rails (verified with >=4.2) treats these headers as case-insensitive
request.headers['CONTENT_TYPE'] # "application/json"
request.headers['Content-type'] # "application/json"
request.headers['Content-Type'] # "application/json"
May be your question was related to previous Rails version, since it was asked in 2013.
To avoid messing with headers is better to use dedicated methods for that:
Method |
Header |
Meaning |
request.content_type |
Content-Type |
What a client is sending to you |
request.format |
Accept |
What a client is expecting from you |