Add mime type to HTML link

59,713

Solution 1

Time to answer my own question. This is a really old question and it probably wasn't possible at the time but lots has changed since then. The HTML5 spec added the download attribute:

<a href="hugepdf.pdf" download>Download file</a>

This will do exactly what I need, tell the browser to download the file instead of opening it. Thanks to Jonathan Svärdén for solving my years old question!

Solution 2

You can specify a type attribute, but the content-type sent by the server is authoritative.

This attribute gives an advisory hint as to the content type of the content available at the link target address. It allows user agents to opt to use a fallback mechanism rather than fetch the content if they are advised that they will get content in a content type they do not support.

Other than that, no, you can't.

Solution 3

Can you set up a middleman script which downloads the file in question to the server, then uploads it to the user with a different MIME type?

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Cimm
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Cimm

Intrigued by the web and its potential, convinced it will keep reinventing itself and happy to be part of that. Feels there is not enough time to build all the applications he comes up with.

Updated on September 28, 2020

Comments

  • Cimm
    Cimm over 3 years

    I know how to change the MIME type in a webserver. I used this to make sure the browser downloads my .scrpt file instead of opening the plain text version. So far so good but is it possible to do the same with a link? I would like to link to a file on GitHub but this will open as a plain text file. Can I add a "MIME type attribute" to the link to tell the browser to download the file?

    This is what I would like to see:

    <a mimetype="application/octet-stream" href="http://gist.github.com/raw/279094/39d5a2c1037288d5ee0ba1a17dca9edb368bbe42/RepairiPhotoDates.scpt">download</a>