Headers
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since March 2017.
Note: This feature is available in Web Workers.
The Headers
interface of the Fetch API allows you to perform various actions on HTTP request and response headers. These actions include retrieving, setting, adding to, and removing headers from the list of the request's headers.
You can retrieve a Headers
object via the Request.headers
and Response.headers
properties, and create a new Headers
object using the Headers()
constructor.
Note: You can find out more about the available headers by reading our HTTP headers reference.
Description
A Headers
object has an associated header list, which is initially empty and consists of zero or more name and value pairs. You can add to this using methods like append()
(see Examples.) In all methods of this interface, header names are matched by case-insensitive byte sequence.
An object implementing Headers
can directly be used in a for...of
structure, instead of entries()
: for (const p of myHeaders)
is equivalent to for (const p of myHeaders.entries())
.
Modification restrictions
Some Headers
objects have restrictions on whether the set()
, delete()
, and append()
methods can mutate the header. The modification restrictions are set depending on how the Headers
object is created.
- For headers created with
Headers()
constructor, there are no modification restrictions. - For headers of
Request
objects:- If the request's
mode
isno-cors
, you can modify any CORS-safelisted request header name/value. - Otherwise, you can modify any non-forbidden header name/value.
- If the request's
- For headers of
Response
objects:- If the response is created using
Response.error()
orResponse.redirect()
, or received from afetch()
call, the headers are immutable and cannot be modified. - Otherwise, if the response is created using
Response()
orResponse.json()
, you can modify any non-forbidden response header name/value.
- If the response is created using
All of the Headers methods will throw a TypeError
if you try to pass in a reference to a name that isn't a valid HTTP Header name. The mutation operations will throw a TypeError
if the header is immutable. In any other failure case they fail silently.
Constructor
Headers()
-
Creates a new
Headers
object.
Instance methods
Headers.append()
-
Appends a new value onto an existing header inside a
Headers
object, or adds the header if it does not already exist. Headers.delete()
-
Deletes a header from a
Headers
object. Headers.entries()
-
Returns an
iterator
allowing to go through all key/value pairs contained in this object. Headers.forEach()
-
Executes a provided function once for each key/value pair in this
Headers
object. Headers.get()
-
Returns a
String
sequence of all the values of a header within aHeaders
object with a given name. -
Returns an array containing the values of all
Set-Cookie
headers associated with a response. Headers.has()
-
Returns a boolean stating whether a
Headers
object contains a certain header. Headers.keys()
-
Returns an
iterator
allowing you to go through all keys of the key/value pairs contained in this object. Headers.set()
-
Sets a new value for an existing header inside a
Headers
object, or adds the header if it does not already exist. Headers.values()
-
Returns an
iterator
allowing you to go through all values of the key/value pairs contained in this object.
Note:
To be clear, the difference between Headers.set()
and Headers.append()
is that if the specified header does already exist and does accept multiple values, Headers.set()
will overwrite the existing value with the new one, whereas Headers.append()
will append the new value onto the end of the set of values. See their dedicated pages for example code.
Note: When Header values are iterated over, they are automatically sorted in lexicographical order, and values from duplicate header names are combined.
Examples
In the following snippet, we create a new header using the Headers()
constructor, add a new header to it using append()
, then return that header value using get()
:
const myHeaders = new Headers();
myHeaders.append("Content-Type", "text/xml");
myHeaders.get("Content-Type"); // should return 'text/xml'
The same can be achieved by passing an array of arrays or an object literal to the constructor:
let myHeaders = new Headers({
"Content-Type": "text/xml",
});
// or, using an array of arrays:
myHeaders = new Headers([["Content-Type", "text/xml"]]);
myHeaders.get("Content-Type"); // should return 'text/xml'
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Fetch Standard # headers-class |
Browser compatibility
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