![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Especially when content-disposition gets to override the values here. > It seems weird that content providers need a second way to achieve the same thing that content-disposition does. > Finally some user agents don't support "downloading for later" at all. > Also some user agents support showing "intended for downloading" resources inline and do, treating them as normal navigations. In that case, only the default action can be executed for a specific link. Sometimes authors want to set a default action even for the "html" file like below:Īnd, many web pages block the context menu with scripts for security or other reasons. > Most user agents give users a way to decide to download any arbitrary resource, so I'm not entirely sure what value is added by pre-flagging a downloadable resource.ĭifference is the default action for clicking the link is changed. There are many cases for that such as attached files for blog, email. When the author intend to set a default action for a link as download. > Why was it added? What is the use case? I don't quite feel like digging into w3c or whatwg archives to look at the discussion of why it was added. ![]()
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