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I've seen a number of references to gzipping a javascript to save download time. But I also see a number of warnings that certain browsers do not support this.

I have two different methods at my disposal:

  1. use mod_deflate to make Apache compress JS/CSS files in a given directory through htaccess
  2. use ob_start('gzhandler') to compress a file and return it to the browser with the correct headers.

The problems with method 1 are that not all browsers support mod_deflate, and I have no clue how to write the htaccess file to be smart enough to adjust for this.

The problem with method 2 is that there is no definitive answer about how to tell if a browser supports a gzipped script, or stylesheet, and that if it does what mime-type must be given as the content type in the header.

I need some advice. First, which method is more universally accepted by browsers? Second, how do I decay using either method to provide the uncompressed backup script? Third, would <script src="js/lib.js.gz" type="text/javascript"></script> work by itself? (It obviously wouldn't decay.)

For the record, I'm using PHP5 with mod_deflate and full gzip creation capabilities, and my doctype is xhtml strict. Also, the javascript itself is compressed with YUI. Edit: I just went back and looked, but I have only Apache 1.3; I thought I had 2, so sorry for mentioning mod_deflate when I probably don't have it.

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I've seen a number of references to gzipping a javascript to save download time. But I also see a number of warnings that certain browsers do not support this.

I have two different methods at my disposal:

  1. use mod_deflate to make Apache compress JS/CSS files in a given directory through htaccess
  2. use ob_start('gzhandler') to compress a file and return it to the browser with the correct headers.

The problems with method 1 are that not all browsers support mod_deflate, and I have no clue how to write the htaccess file to be smart enough to adjust for this.

The problem with method 2 is that there is no definitive answer about how to tell if a browser supports a gzipped script, or stylesheet, and that if it does what mime-type must be given as the content type in the header.

I need some advice. First, which method is more universally accepted by browsers? Second, how do I decay using either method to provide the uncompressed backup script? Third, would <script src="js/lib.js.gz" type="text/javascript"></script> work by itself? (It obviously wouldn't decay.)

For the record, I'm using PHP5 with mod_deflate and full gzip creation capabilities, and my doctype is xhtml strict. Also, the javascript itself is compressed with YUI.

show/hide this revision's text 1

How to link to a gzipped javascript in an html document?

I've seen a number of references to gzipping a javascript to save download time. But I also see a number of warnings that certain browsers do not support this.

I have two different methods at my disposal:

  1. use mod_deflate to make Apache compress JS/CSS files in a given directory through htaccess
  2. use ob_start('gzhandler') to compress a file and return it to the browser with the correct headers.

The problems with method 1 are that not all browsers support mod_deflate, and I have no clue how to write the htaccess file to be smart enough to adjust for this.

The problem with method 2 is that there is no definitive answer about how to tell if a browser supports a gzipped script, or stylesheet, and that if it does what mime-type must be given as the content type in the header.

I need some advice. First, which method is more universally accepted by browsers? Second, how do I decay using either method to provide the uncompressed backup script? Third, would <script src="js/lib.js.gz" type="text/javascript"></script> work by itself? (It obviously wouldn't decay.)

For the record, I'm using PHP5 with mod_deflate and full gzip creation capabilities, and my doctype is xhtml strict.