i am afraid you have no way to parse the "Content-Type" in your javascript. because it the the header of the response, and you can only get the body (the content) of the response.
actually, for a ajax to be able to work correctly, you MUST guarantee the request you send with ajax can get what you want, and you always know beforehand what the format (content type) it would be. for jquery, if you do not specify the content type parameter, it is smart enough to figure out what it is. On Fri, Dec 18, 2009 at 6:50 AM, MrM <j...@merhar.si> wrote: > Hi, > > Firstly, let me apologize if this has been discussed before. I have > searched the group and couldn't find anything on the subject. > > Now, to my question. Am I correct to assume that the jQuery.ajax > function pays no heed to the Content-Type response header it receives > from the server? If so, can I ask why? For instance, if the server > sends 'application/json', it is fairly safe to assume that the > response will be in JSON format and should therefore be eval'd. > > I have a situation where I do not know beforehand, what type of data > the server will return, and therefore cannot specify a dataType > parameter. In this case, I would like jQuery to parse the response, if > it receives a 'Content-Type' header of 'application/json', and only > then. If the header received is 'text/html', the response should not > be parsed. > > Is there a reason why the 'Content-Type' response header is being > ignored, when the dataType parameter is not specified? Or is this not > the case and I am missing something? > > Thanks! > -- Best Regards, David Shen http://twitter.com/davidshen84/ http://meme.yahoo.com/davidshen84/