An HTTP response, which returns the headers and data from the server to the client in response to an HTTP request.
Every HttpRequest object provides access to the associated HttpResponse
object through the response
property.
The server sends its response to the client by writing to the
HttpResponse object.
This class implements IOSink.
After the header has been set up, the methods
from IOSink, such as writeln()
, can be used to write
the body of the HTTP response.
Use the close()
method to close the response and send it to the client.
server.listen((HttpRequest request) {
request.response.write('Hello, world!');
request.response.close();
});
When one of the IOSink methods is used for the first time, the request header is sent. Calling any methods that change the header after it is sent throws an exception.
The HttpResponse object has a number of properties for setting up the HTTP headers of the response. When writing string data through the IOSink, the encoding used is determined from the "charset" parameter of the "Content-Type" header.
HttpResponse response = ...
response.headers.contentType
= new ContentType("application", "json", charset: "utf-8");
response.write(...); // Strings written will be UTF-8 encoded.
If no charset is provided the default of ISO-8859-1 (Latin 1) will be used.
HttpResponse response = ...
response.headers.add(HttpHeaders.contentTypeHeader, "text/plain");
response.write(...); // Strings written will be ISO-8859-1 encoded.
An exception is thrown if you use the write()
method
while an unsupported content-type is set.
null
if the
socket is not available.
location
. [...]
data
to the target consumer, ignoring encoding. [...]
stream
to this
. [...]
obj
to a String by invoking Object.toString and
adds the encoding of the result to the target consumer. [...]
objects
and writes them in sequence. [...]
charCode
. [...]
obj
to a String by invoking Object.toString and
writes the result to this
, followed by a newline. [...]