I read recently (I can't recall where, or I'd return to that source) that the misspelling of HTTP header field name Referer in the specification was intentional. Is that accurate? If so, why?
2 Answers
Phillip Hallam-Baker and Roy Fielding are responsible for it. By the time they realized it was incorrect, too many people were using it.
Now, Phillip jokes about getting the Oxford Dictionary to recognize his spelling:
Its like when I did the referer field. I got nothing but grief for my choice of spelling. I am now attempting to get the spelling corrected in the OED since my spelling is used several billion times a minute more than theirs.
Roy also joked about the fact that the UNIX spell
command didn't recognize any spelling of it:
>
Has anyone else noticed that the HTTP header "Referer:" is spelled wrong?That's okay, neither one (referer or referrer) is understood by "spell" anyway. I say we should just blame it on France. ;-)
Info taken from HTTP_REFERER Origins Wikipedia article.
-
140It's not a misspelling; it's an optimization. By leaving out the redundant 'R' in the header name, he's probably reduced many terabytes of bandwidth usage over the years. =P Jun 21, 2010 at 19:53
-
26
-
My brain hates typos. As much as Hallam-Baker jokes about trying to get his version in the dictionary, the bottom line is that he didn't know how to spell. So damned annoying! Mar 10 at 20:26
I believe it was a mistake that was only picked up after release, at that point it was too late to change it and a lot of dependencies already existed.
a wiki link to (semi) prove it :)
-
5
-
3I thought I read somewhere that
HELO
in SMTP was a throwback to ARPANET but I can't find any citations for that, so take it with a boulder of salt. Jul 22, 2016 at 15:40 -
-
1Spelling it
HELO
is probably to fit a 4-character limit for command names. (Just like with FTP commands.)– GeorgeAug 20, 2020 at 20:49