1133

I'm trying to set the Content-Type header of an HttpClient object as required by an API I am calling.

I tried setting the Content-Type like below:

using (var httpClient = new HttpClient())
{
    httpClient.BaseAddress = new Uri("http://example.com/");
    httpClient.DefaultRequestHeaders.Add("Accept", "application/json");
    httpClient.DefaultRequestHeaders.Add("Content-Type", "application/json");
    // ...
}

It allows me to add the Accept header but when I try to add Content-Type it throws the following exception:

Misused header name. Make sure request headers are used with HttpRequestMessage, response headers with HttpResponseMessage, and content headers with HttpContent objects.

How can I set the Content-Type header in a HttpClient request?

1

24 Answers 24

1392

The content type is a header of the content, not of the request, which is why this is failing. AddWithoutValidation as suggested by Robert Levy may work, but you can also set the content type when creating the request content itself (note that the code snippet adds application/json in two places-for Accept and Content-Type headers):

HttpClient client = new HttpClient();
client.BaseAddress = new Uri("http://example.com/");
client.DefaultRequestHeaders
      .Accept
      .Add(new MediaTypeWithQualityHeaderValue("application/json"));//ACCEPT header

HttpRequestMessage request = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Post, "relativeAddress");
request.Content = new StringContent("{\"name\":\"John Doe\",\"age\":33}",
                                    Encoding.UTF8, 
                                    "application/json");//CONTENT-TYPE header

client.SendAsync(request)
      .ContinueWith(responseTask =>
      {
          Console.WriteLine("Response: {0}", responseTask.Result);
      });
15
  • 50
    Alternatively, Response.Content.Headers will work most of the time. Nov 11, 2012 at 22:45
  • 8
    @AshishJain Most of the SO answers I've seen involving Response.Content.Headers for the ASP.Net Web API haven't worked either, but you can easily set it using HttpContext.Current.Response.ContentType if you need to.
    – jerhewet
    Oct 30, 2014 at 22:45
  • 11
    @jerhewet i used in following way which worked for me. var content = new StringContent(data, Encoding.UTF8, "application/json"); Oct 31, 2014 at 6:54
  • 34
    Content-Type is a property of an HTTP message with payload; it has nothing to do with request vs response. May 15, 2015 at 10:08
  • 17
    Interesting. I tried creating a new StringContent with the three parameters and it didn't work. I then manually: request.Content.Headers.Remove("Content-Type") and then: request.Content.Headers.Add("Content-Type", "application/query+json") and it worked. Odd.
    – Bill Noel
    Oct 3, 2016 at 13:33
231
req.Content.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/octet-stream");
4
  • I had to throw .ToString() on the end, but yes this worked for a WCF service implementation.
    – John Meyer
    Jul 13, 2016 at 21:13
  • 5
    I will eventually figure out what object type "req" is ... by trial and error........BUT it would be great to show that. Thank you for your consideration. Dec 21, 2018 at 15:38
  • System.Net.Http.HttpRequestMessage from "microsoft.netcore.app\2.1.0\ref\netcoreapp2.1\System.Net.Http.dll" is where I found it. Dec 21, 2018 at 16:11
  • 6
    Just so folks know, using MediaTypeHeaderValue will return an error if attempting to set the charset, like so; response.Content.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("text/xml; charset=utf-8"); Jan 18, 2019 at 16:44
63

If you don't mind a small library dependency, Flurl.Http [disclosure: I'm the author] makes this uber-simple. Its PostJsonAsync method takes care of both serializing the content and setting the content-type header, and ReceiveJson deserializes the response. If the accept header is required you'll need to set that yourself, but Flurl provides a pretty clean way to do that too:

using Flurl.Http;

var result = await "http://example.com/"
    .WithHeader("Accept", "application/json")
    .PostJsonAsync(new { ... })
    .ReceiveJson<TResult>();

Flurl uses HttpClient and Json.NET under the hood, and it's a PCL so it'll work on a variety of platforms.

PM> Install-Package Flurl.Http
1
  • 2
    How to send if content is application/x-www-form-urlencoded? Mar 1, 2017 at 16:24
49

.Net tries to force you to obey certain standards, namely that the Content-Type header can only be specified on requests that have content (e.g. POST, PUT, etc.). Therefore, as others have indicated, the preferred way to set the Content-Type header is through the HttpContent.Headers.ContentType property.

With that said, certain APIs (such as the LiquidFiles Api, as of 2016-12-19) requires setting the Content-Type header for a GET request. .Net will not allow setting this header on the request itself -- even using TryAddWithoutValidation. Furthermore, you cannot specify a Content for the request -- even if it is of zero-length. The only way I could seem to get around this was to resort to reflection. The code (in case some else needs it) is

var field = typeof(System.Net.Http.Headers.HttpRequestHeaders)
    .GetField("invalidHeaders", System.Reflection.BindingFlags.NonPublic | System.Reflection.BindingFlags.Static) 
  ?? typeof(System.Net.Http.Headers.HttpRequestHeaders) 
    .GetField("s_invalidHeaders", System.Reflection.BindingFlags.NonPublic | System.Reflection.BindingFlags.Static);
if (field != null)
{
  var invalidFields = (HashSet<string>)field.GetValue(null);
  invalidFields.Remove("Content-Type");
}
_client.DefaultRequestHeaders.TryAddWithoutValidation("Content-Type", "text/xml");

Edit:

As noted in the comments, this field has different names in different versions of the dll. In the source code on GitHub, the field is currently named s_invalidHeaders. The example has been modified to account for this per the suggestion of @David Thompson.

5
  • Not working with .Net Framework version 4.0, System.Net.Http version 2.2.29.0 but working with 2.0.0.0
    – prem
    Jan 25, 2017 at 10:12
  • 1
    This field is now s_invalidHeaders so using the following ensures compatibility: var field = typeof(System.Net.Http.Headers.HttpRequestHeaders) .GetField("invalidHeaders", System.Reflection.BindingFlags.NonPublic | System.Reflection.BindingFlags.Static) ?? typeof(System.Net.Http.Headers.HttpRequestHeaders) .GetField("s_invalidHeaders", System.Reflection.BindingFlags.NonPublic | System.Reflection.BindingFlags.Static); Mar 21, 2017 at 11:30
  • Awesome hack. Works for me, however, first time it does't apply the JSON header, but all subsequent calls it does. Anyone had similar behavior? I did work around it but any good hack around it?
    – GDroid
    Jul 11, 2019 at 1:41
  • I've noticed that if I use this in my API which calls a 3rd-party API the first request is successful but subsequent ones fail and I can't get it working again unless I restart IIS. May 4, 2020 at 16:03
  • The problem with using this is that it breaks all the other API calls that didn't have this problem. I think because of the BindingFlags.Static which is required to make this work.
    – nuander
    Mar 14, 2022 at 23:04
48

try to use TryAddWithoutValidation

  var client = new HttpClient();
  client.DefaultRequestHeaders.TryAddWithoutValidation("Content-Type", "application/json; charset=utf-8");
3
  • 7
    not working gives me a 'Misused header name. Make sure request headers are used with HttpRequestMessage, response headers with HttpResponseMessage, and content headers with HttpContent objects.' Jan 4, 2018 at 20:11
  • 3
    Those of you reporting "working" or "not working", HttpClient is a very ambiguous object these days. Please report the fullname(space) and .dll assembly it is coming from. Dec 21, 2018 at 16:19
  • the Misused header name error is confirmed with dotnet core 2.2. I had to use @carlosfigueira's answer stackoverflow.com/a/10679340/2084315.
    – ps2goat
    Feb 5, 2019 at 22:29
34

For those who troubled with charset

I had very special case that the service provider didn't accept charset, and they refuse to change the substructure to allow it... Unfortunately HttpClient was setting the header automatically through StringContent, and no matter if you pass null or Encoding.UTF8, it will always set the charset...

Today i was on the edge to change the sub-system; moving from HttpClient to anything else, that something came to my mind..., why not use reflection to empty out the "charset"? ... And before i even try it, i thought of a way, "maybe I can change it after initialization", and that worked.

Here's how you can set the exact "application/json" header without "; charset=utf-8".

var jsonRequest = JsonSerializeObject(req, options); // Custom function that parse object to string
var stringContent = new StringContent(jsonRequest, Encoding.UTF8, "application/json");
stringContent.Headers.ContentType.CharSet = null;
return stringContent;

Note: The null value in following won't work, and append "; charset=utf-8"

return new StringContent(jsonRequest, null, "application/json");

EDIT

@DesertFoxAZ suggests that also the following code can be used and works fine. (didn't test it myself, if it work's rate and credit him in comments)

stringContent.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/json");
3
  • 2
    stringContent.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/json"); also works Apr 16, 2020 at 16:12
  • Was getting 415 Errors with UPS new API, constantly saying "Content-Type should be application/json" even though everything was set to application/json. Turns out setting the ContentType.CharSet = null worked for their api. Feb 5 at 14:25
  • @PGP_Protector I'm sorry to hear that, and glad you could fix it on your own, in my country, we are forbidden to use most foreign services, so I was afraid that I couldn't help you. I'm not sure if I also got the same error or something else, however, some systems use the code as they want and as it's defined and means in their team, it doesn't have, and not everything is fully standardized out Feb 5 at 14:43
26

Some extra information about .NET Core (after reading erdomke's post about setting a private field to supply the content-type on a request that doesn't have content):

After debugging my code, I can't see the private field to set via reflection - so I thought I'd try to recreate the problem.

I have tried the following code using .NET 4.6:

HttpRequestMessage httpRequest = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get, @"myUrl");
httpRequest.Content = new StringContent(string.Empty, Encoding.UTF8, "application/json");

HttpClient client = new HttpClient();
Task<HttpResponseMessage> response =  client.SendAsync(httpRequest);  //I know I should have used async/await here!
var result = response.Result;

And, as expected, I get an aggregate exception with the content

Cannot send a content-body with this verb-type.

However, if I do the same thing with .NET Core (1.1), I don't get an exception. My request was quite happily answered by my server application, and the content-type was picked up.

0
22

Call AddWithoutValidation instead of Add (see this MSDN link).

Alternatively, I'm guessing the API you are using really only requires this for POST or PUT requests (not ordinary GET requests). In that case, when you call HttpClient.PostAsync and pass in an HttpContent, set this on the Headers property of that HttpContent object.

2
  • 5
    AddWithoutValidation does not exist Jun 12, 2018 at 8:31
  • I believe what was meant was TryAddWithoutValidation; full reference is System.Net.Http.Headers.HttpHeaders.TryAddWithoutValidation.
    – TommyJ
    Sep 1, 2023 at 5:00
21

The trick is that you can just set all kinds of headers like:

HttpRequestMessage request = new HttpRequestMessage();
request.Headers.Add("Accept-Language", "en"); //works OK

but not any header. For example:

request.Headers.Add("Content-Type", "application/json");//wrong

will raise the run-time exception Misused header name. It may seem that this will work:

request.Headers.Add(
   HttpRequestHeader.ContentType.ToString(), //useless
   "application/json"
);

but this gives a useless header named ContentType, without the hyphen. Header names are not case-sensitive, but are very hyphen-sensitive.

The solution is to declare the encoding and type of the body when adding the body to the Content part of the http request:

string Body = "...";
request.Content = new StringContent(Body, Encoding.UTF8, "application/json");

Only then the applicable http header is automatically added to the request, like:

Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8

It was hard to find this out, with Fiddler, on a machine without a proxy server. Visual Studio used to have a Network Tool where you could inspect all headers, but only in version 2015, not in newer versions 2017 or 2022. If you use the debugger to inspect request.Headers, you will not find the header added automagically by StringContent().

4
  • 1
    For some headers removing the "-" works, e.g request.Headers.Add("ContentType", "application/json")
    – Xserge
    Dec 26, 2022 at 15:06
  • @Xserge What do you mean with "works"? Sure, this does not give a build error. But the server will not recognize your ContentType header to set a content type, as I explained in my answer.
    – Roland
    Dec 26, 2022 at 15:38
  • Some servers do, especially the old CMS systems. In fact, HttpRequestHeader.ContentType.ToString() produces "ContentType".
    – Xserge
    Dec 26, 2022 at 15:44
  • 2
    @Xserge Sure, but the original question was not how to set the ContentType header, but how to set the Content-Type header. If some RFC requires you to set some header, the header name is not case-sensitive, but sure is hyphen-sensitive. As I explained in my answer. Happy Holidays to you!
    – Roland
    Dec 26, 2022 at 15:51
7

You can use this it will be work!

HttpRequestMessage msg = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get,"URL");
msg.Content = new StringContent(string.Empty, Encoding.UTF8, "application/json");

HttpResponseMessage response = await _httpClient.SendAsync(msg);
response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();

string json = await response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();
1
  • 2
    This only works with .NET Core, not .NET Framework.
    – codeMonkey
    Jun 9, 2021 at 0:58
5

For anyone that needs the content-type header for Get etc., while in an older .NET version it is possible to use the answer of @erdomke at https://stackoverflow.com/a/41231353, this unfortunately no longer works in the newer .NET Core versions.

The following code has been tested to work with .NET Core 3.1 and from the source code on GitHub it looks like it should work with newer .NET versions as well.

private void FixContentTypeHeaders()
{
    var assembly = typeof(System.Net.Http.Headers.HttpRequestHeaders).Assembly;
    var assemblyTypes = assembly.GetTypes();

    var knownHeaderType = assemblyTypes.FirstOrDefault(n => n.Name == "KnownHeader");
    var headerTypeField = knownHeaderType?
                .GetFields(System.Reflection.BindingFlags.NonPublic | System.Reflection.BindingFlags.Instance)
                .FirstOrDefault(n => n.Name.Contains("HeaderType"));
    if (headerTypeField is null) return;

    var headerTypeFieldType = headerTypeField.FieldType;            
    var newValue = Enum.Parse(headerTypeFieldType, "All");

    var knownHeadersType = assemblyTypes.FirstOrDefault(n => n.Name == "KnownHeaders");
    var contentTypeObj = knownHeadersType.GetFields().FirstOrDefault(n => n.Name == "ContentType").GetValue(null);

    if (contentTypeObj is null) return;

    headerTypeField.SetValue(contentTypeObj, newValue);
}
3
  • 1
    Why is all this reflection necessary? It's the content object that dictates Content-Type, and you can add a content object on GET requests as well as POST, PUT, etc. If you don't have a content object (body) then Content-Type is an irrelevant header. Mar 3, 2021 at 2:16
  • @John There are frameworks including Microsoft own frameworks that require the header even for a Get and even when there is no Content, don't ask me why.. and why their client removes it when their server expects it...
    – yoel halb
    Mar 5, 2021 at 0:33
  • Unless the Content-Length header presents a problem, isn't it better just to create a derived HttpContent object that allows you to specify the header rather than doing all this reflection? Mar 5, 2021 at 1:48
4
var content = new JsonContent();
content.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/json");
content.Headers.ContentType.Parameters.Add(new NameValueHeaderValue("charset", "utf-8"));
content.Headers.ContentType.Parameters.Add(new NameValueHeaderValue("IEEE754Compatible", "true"));

It's all what you need.

With using Newtonsoft.Json, if you need a content as json string.

public class JsonContent : HttpContent
   {
    private readonly MemoryStream _stream = new MemoryStream();
    ~JsonContent()
    {
        _stream.Dispose();
    }

    public JsonContent(object value)
    {
        Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/json");
        using (var contexStream = new MemoryStream())
        using (var jw = new JsonTextWriter(new StreamWriter(contexStream)) { Formatting = Formatting.Indented })
        {
            var serializer = new JsonSerializer();
            serializer.Serialize(jw, value);
            jw.Flush();
            contexStream.Position = 0;
            contexStream.WriteTo(_stream);
        }
        _stream.Position = 0;

    }

    private JsonContent(string content)
    {
        Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/json");
        using (var contexStream = new MemoryStream())
        using (var sw = new StreamWriter(contexStream))
        {
            sw.Write(content);
            sw.Flush();
            contexStream.Position = 0;
            contexStream.WriteTo(_stream);
        }
        _stream.Position = 0;
    }

    protected override Task SerializeToStreamAsync(Stream stream, TransportContext context)
    {
        return _stream.CopyToAsync(stream);
    }

    protected override bool TryComputeLength(out long length)
    {
        length = _stream.Length;
        return true;
    }

    public static HttpContent FromFile(string filepath)
    {
        var content = File.ReadAllText(filepath);
        return new JsonContent(content);
    }
    public string ToJsonString()
    {
        return Encoding.ASCII.GetString(_stream.GetBuffer(), 0, _stream.GetBuffer().Length).Trim();
    }
}
3
  • 2
    Can you give a small explanation of what it does?
    – Alejandro
    May 28, 2018 at 14:03
  • 2
    The first line fails with CS0144: "Cannot create an instance of the abstract class or interface 'HttpContent'" Aug 22, 2018 at 12:17
  • 1
    and then HttpMessageHandler handler = new WebRequestHandler(); HttpResponseMessage result; using (var client = (new HttpClient(handler, true))) { result = client.PostAsync(fullUri, content).Result; }
    – art24war
    Nov 21, 2018 at 15:14
3

Ok, it's not HTTPClient but if u can use it, WebClient is quite easy:

using (var client = new System.Net.WebClient())
 {
    client.Headers.Add("Accept", "application/json");
    client.Headers.Add("Content-Type", "application/json; charset=utf-8");
    client.DownloadString(...);
 }
3

try to use HttpClientFactory

services.AddSingleton<WebRequestXXX>()
        .AddHttpClient<WebRequestXXX>("ClientX", config =>
        {
           config.BaseAddress = new System.Uri("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com");
           config.DefaultRequestHeaders.Accept.Add(new MediaTypeWithQualityHeaderValue("application/json"));
           config.DefaultRequestHeaders.TryAddWithoutValidation("Content-Type", "application/json; charset=utf-8");
        });

======================

public class WebRequestXXXX
{
    private readonly IHttpClientFactory _httpClientFactory;

    public WebRequestXXXX(IHttpClientFactory httpClientFactory)
    {
        _httpClientFactory = httpClientFactory;
    }

    public List<Posts> GetAllPosts()
    {
        using (var _client = _httpClientFactory.CreateClient("ClientX"))
        {
            var response = _client.GetAsync("/posts").Result;

            if (response.IsSuccessStatusCode)
            {
                var itemString = response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync().Result;
                var itemJson = System.Text.Json.JsonSerializer.Deserialize<List<Posts>>(itemString, 
                    new System.Text.Json.JsonSerializerOptions 
                    {
                        PropertyNameCaseInsensitive = true
                    });

                return itemJson;
            }
            else
            {
                return new List<Posts>();
            }
        }
    }
}
1
  • Yeah, but don't use ReadAsStringAsync, ever, when deserializing json. Use ReadAsStream, and deserialize the stream. Nov 1, 2022 at 16:20
3

I got the answer with RestSharp:

private async Task<string> GetAccessTokenAsync()
{
    var client = new RestClient(_baseURL);

    var request = new RestRequest("auth/v1/login", Method.POST, DataFormat.Json);

    request.AddHeader("Content-Type", "application/json");
    request.AddHeader("x-api-key", _apiKey);
    request.AddHeader("Accept-Language", "br");
    request.AddHeader("x-client-tenant", "1");

    ...
}

It worked for me.

1
  • But you are adding header to request, not to client
    – wut
    Dec 12, 2022 at 20:37
2

For those wanting to set the Content-Type to Json specifically, you can use the extension method PostAsJsonAsync.

using System.Net.Http.Json; //this is needed for PostAsJsonAsync to work
//....
HttpClient client = new HttpClient();
HttpResponseMessage response = await
    client.PostAsJsonAsync("http://example.com/" + "relativeAddress",
                new
                {
                    name = "John Doe",
                    age = 33
                });
//Do what you need to do with your response

The advantage here is cleaner code and you get to avoid stringified json. More details can be found at: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/aspnet/hh944339(v=vs.118)

1
  • 3
    problem I'm running into is that PostAsJsonAsync doesn't set the Content-type header!!
    – Geoduck
    Dec 12, 2021 at 0:20
1

You need to do it like this:

    HttpContent httpContent = new StringContent(@"{ the json string }");
    httpContent.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/json");
    client.DefaultRequestHeaders.Accept.Add(new MediaTypeWithQualityHeaderValue("application/json"));                
    HttpResponseMessage message = client.PostAsync(@"{url}", httpContent).Result;
1

For my scenario, a third-party API was creating the HttpRequestMessage, so I was not able to use the top-voted answers to resolve the issue. And I didn't like the idea of messing with reflection so the other answers didn't work either.

Instead, I extended from AndroidMessageHandler and used this new class as a parameter to HttpClient. AndroidMessageHandler contains the method SendAsync which can be overridden in order to make changes to the HttpRequestMessage object before it is sent. If you don't have access to the Android Xamarin libaries, you may be able to figure something out with HttpMessageHandler.

public class XamarinHttpMessageHandler : global::Xamarin.Android.Net.AndroidMessageHandler
{
    protected override Task<HttpResponseMessage> SendAsync(HttpRequestMessage request, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
    {
        // Here I make check that I'm only modifying a specific request
        // and not all of them.
        if (request.RequestUri != null && request.RequestUri.AbsolutePath.EndsWith("download") && request.Content != null)
        {
            request.Content.Headers.Add("Content-Type", "text/plain");
        }
        return base.SendAsync(request, cancellationToken);
    }
}

Then to use:

var client = new HttpClient(new XamarinHttpMessageHandler());
0

I find it most simple and easy to understand in the following way:

async Task SendPostRequest()
{
    HttpClient client = new HttpClient();
    var requestContent = new StringContent(<content>);
    requestContent.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/json");
    var response = await client.PostAsync(<url>, requestContent);
    var responseString = await response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();
}
...

SendPostRequest().Wait();
0

Api returned

"Unsupported Media Type","status":415

Adding ContentType to the jsonstring did the magic and this is my script working 100% as of today

    using (var client = new HttpClient())
            {
                   var endpoint = "api/endpoint;
                    var userName = "xxxxxxxxxx";
                    var passwd = "xxxxxxxxxx";
                    var content = new StringContent(jsonString, Encoding.UTF8, "application/json");

                    var authToken = Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes($"{userName}:{passwd}");

                client.BaseAddress = new Uri("https://example.com/");

                client.DefaultRequestHeaders.Authorization = new AuthenticationHeaderValue("Basic", Convert.ToBase64String(authToken));
            
                HttpResponseMessage response = await client.PostAsync(endpoint, content);

                if (response.IsSuccessStatusCode)
                {
                    // Get the URI of the created resource.
                    Uri returnUrl = response.Headers.Location;
                    Console.WriteLine(returnUrl);
                }
                string responseBody = await response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();
                return responseBody;
        }
0

So if you're trying to do a /$batch OData request like this Microsoft article demonstrates where you're supposed to have a Content-Type header like:

Content-Type: multipart/mixed;boundary=batch_d3bcb804-ee77-4921-9a45-761f98d32029

string headerValue = "multipart/mixed;boundary=batch_d3bcb804-ee77-4921-9a45-761f98d32029";

//You need to set it like thus:
request.Content.Headers.ContentType = MediaTypeHeaderValue.Parse(headerValue);

Again, the magic you need is: MediaTypeHeaderValue.Parse(...)

0

Setting the content type (my case I'm setting "application/vnd.api+json") like this worked for me:

var requestBody = new StringContent("{"data": "1"}"), new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/vnd.api+json"));
var response = await _httpClient.PostAsync(apiUrl, requestBody);
0

By default Content-Type header is forbidden in GET methods, at least in -NET Framework implementation. I solve the problem using a custom Handler that inherits from the one used by HttpClient class. I override the SendAsync method which eliminates that header of the forbidden ones (otherwise you get an exception when you try to add the header to the request), and I include the header when the request has GET method:

public class GetRequestHandler : HttpClientHandler {

public GetRequestHandler(): base() {
}

protected override Task<HttpResponseMessage> SendAsync(
    HttpRequestMessage request, CancellationToken cancellationToken) {

    FieldInfo invalidHeadersField = typeof(HttpHeaders).GetField("invalidHeaders", BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance) ?? typeof(HttpHeaders).GetField("_invalidHeaders", BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance);
    HashSet<string> invalidHeaders = (HashSet<string>)invalidHeadersField.GetValue(request.Headers);

    invalidHeaders.Remove("Content-Type");

    if(request.Method == HttpMethod.Get) {
        request.Headers.Remove("Content-Type");
        request.Headers.Add("Content-Type", "application/json");
    }
    

    return base.SendAsync(request, cancellationToken);

}

}

Then, in the HttpClient constructor, i use this custom handler:

HttpClient client = new HttpClient(new GetRequestHandler()); 

Doing this, now this works well:

var response = await client.GetAsync(url);
0

Since .NET 5 we can use static JsonContent.Create method. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.net.http.json.jsoncontent.create?view=net-5.0

It will set request Content-Type to application/json by default. Strange enough, it allows changing the default type by passing MediaTypeHeaderValue argument.

You can also define JsonSerialization options etc.

The code should look something like this:

var content = JsonContent.Create(new {someData = "data"}, options: new JsonSerializerOptions {PropertyNamingPolicy = JsonNamingPolicy.CamelCase});

or simply:

var content = JsonContent.Create(new {someData = "data"});

if you don't need serializer options or different content type.

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