Want to stay connected and productive when working remotely? Visit How to work from home with Google Workspace. Persamaan tr c828. In the Outlook 2016 forum, but was instructed that it should be asked here in the Exchange forum instead.) My organization runs Outlook 2016 via Office 365, using. Filetype Field on ContentVersion object doesn't store MIME type of a file it stores extension. Use FileType Field on ContentDocument Object it will give you MIME type of file. Please mark this as best answer if it helps. In line attach.setContentType(cv.FileType); pass attach.setContentType(cv.contentDocument,FileType); this will work.
MIME types describe the media type of content, either in email, or served by web servers or web applications. They are intended to help provide a hint as to how the content should be processed and displayed.
Examples of MIME types:
text/html
for HTML documents.text/plain
for plain text.text/css
for Cascading Style Sheets.text/javascript
for JavaScript files.text/markdown
for Markdown files.application/octet-stream
for binary files where user action is expected.
Server default configurations vary wildly and set different default MIME-type values for files with no defined content type.
Versions of the Apache Web Server before before 2.2.7 were configured to report a MIME type of text/plain
or application/octet-stream
for unknown content types. Modern versions of Apache report none
for files with unknown content types.
Nginx will report text/plain
if you don't define a default content type.
As new content types are invented or added to web servers, web administrators may fail to add the new MIME types to their web server's configuration. This is a major source of problems for users of browsers that respect the MIME types reported by web servers and applications.
Why are correct MIME types important?
If a web server or application reports an incorrect MIME type for content (including a 'default type' for unknown content), a web browser has no way of knowing the author's intentions. This may cause unexpected behavior.
Some web browsers, such as Internet Explorer, try to guess the correct MIME type. This allows misconfigured web servers and applications to continue working for those browsers (but not other browsers that correctly implement the standard). Apart from violating the HTTP spec, this is a bad idea for a couple of other significant reasons:
- Loss of control
- If the browser ignores the reported MIME type, web administrators and authors no longer have control over how their content is to be processed.
- For example, a web site oriented for web developers might wish to send certain example HTML documents as either
text/html
ortext/plain
in order to have the documents either processed and displayed as HTML or as source code. If the browser guesses the MIME type, this option is no longer available to the author. - Security
- Some content types, such as executable programs, are inherently unsafe. For this reason, these MIME types are usually restricted in terms of what actions a web browser will take when given that type of content. An executable program should not be executed on the user's computer and should at least cause a dialog to appear asking the user if they wish to download the file.
- MIME type guessing has led to security exploits in Internet Explorer that were based upon a malicious author incorrectly reporting a MIME type of a dangerous file as a safe type. This bypassed the normal download dialog, resulting in Internet Explorer guessing that the content was an executable program and then running it on the user's computer.
JavaScript legacy MIME types
When looking for information about JavaScript MIME types, you may see several MIME types that reference JavaScript. Some of these MIME types include:
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application/javascript
application/ecmascript
application/x-ecmascript
application/x-javascript
text/ecmascript
text/javascript1.0
text/javascript1.1
text/javascript1.2
text/javascript1.3
text/javascript1.4
text/javascript1.5
text/x-ecmascript
text/x-javascript
While browsers may support any, some, or all of these alternative MIME types, you should only use text/javascript
to indicate the MIME type of JavaScript files.
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Note: See MIME types (IANA media types) for more information.
How to determine the MIME type to set
See Full List On Docs.microsoft.com
There are several ways to determine the correct MIME type value to be used to serve your content.
- If your content was created using commerical software, read the vendor's documentation to see what MIME types should be reported for the application.
- Look in IANA's MIME Media Types registry, which contains information on all registered MIME types.
- Search for the file extension in FILExt or the File extensions reference to see what MIME types are associated with that extension. Pay close attention as the application may have multiple MIME types that differ by only one letter.
How to check the MIME type of received content
- In Firefox
- Load the file and go to Tools > Page Info to get the content type for the page you accessed.
- You can also go to Tools > Web Developer > Network and reload the page. The request tab gives you a list of all the resources the page loaded. Clicking on any resource will list all the information available, including the page's
Content-Type
header.
- In Chrome
- Load the file and go to View > Developer > Developer Tools and choose the Network tab. Reload the page and select the resource you want to inspect. Under headers look for
Content-Type
and it will report the content type of the resource.
- Load the file and go to View > Developer > Developer Tools and choose the Network tab. Reload the page and select the resource you want to inspect. Under headers look for
- Look for a
<meta>
element in the page source that gives the MIME type, for example<meta http-equiv='Content-Type'>
.- According to the standards, the
<meta>
element that specifies the MIME type should be ignored if there's a Content-Type header available.
- According to the standards, the
IANA keeps a list of registered MIME Media Types. The HTTP specification defines a superset of MIME types, which is used to describe the media types used on the web.
How to set up your server to send the correct MIME types
The goal is to configure your server to send the correct Content-Type
header for each document.
- If you're using the Apache web server, check the Media Types and Character Encodings section of Apache Configuration: .htaccess for examples of different document types and their corresponding MIME types.
- If you're using NGINX, look at the NGINX configuration snippets. NGINX does not have a
.htaccess
equivalent tool, so all changes will go into the main configuration file. - If you're using a server-side script or framework to generate content, the way to indicate the content type will depend on the tool you're using. Check the framework or library's documentation.