Redirect after post or post/redirect/get is something your application must do to be user friendly.
Edit. This is above and beyond the HTTP specifications. If we simply return a 201 after a POST, the browser back button behaves badly.
Note that Web Services requests (which do NOT respond to a browser) follow the standard completely and do NOT redirect after post.
It works like this.
The browser POSTS the data.
Your application validates the data. If it's invalid, you respond with the form so they can fix it and POST.
Your application responds with a redirect.
The browser gets the redirect and does a GET.
Your application sees the GET and responds.
Now -- hey presto! -- the back button works.
