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Content-Disposition

Indicates if the resource transmitted should be displayed inline (default behavior without the header), or if it should be handled like a download and the browser should present a “Save As” dialog.

The Content-Disposition HTTP header is a specialized field used to indicates if the resource transmitted should be displayed inline (default behavior without the header), or if it should be handled like a download and the browser should present a “Save As” dialog. It acts as a signaling mechanism between the client and the server to enforce policies, negotiate capabilities, or provide telemetry data during the transmission of requests and responses.

This header is primarily utilized when the client or browser needs to declare its context or capabilities prior to establishing the transaction. Modern web applications rely on this to maintain state and context.

It facilitates seamless programmatic integration by ensuring both the client and server agree on the terms of the transaction, greatly improving performance, security, and rendering correctness without manual user intervention.

Implement or parse this header within your application’s network layer (such as an Express middleware or a Next.js edge function) by reading or attaching the key-value pair:

Content-Disposition: <appropriate-value>
Content-Disposition: <value>