Description
int header
(string string)
The Header() function is used at the top of an
HTML file to send raw HTTP
header strings. See the HTTP 1.1
Specification for more information on raw http headers.
Note: Remember that the
Header() function must be called before any
actual output is sent either by normal HTML tags or from PHP. It
is a very common error to read code with
include() or with auto_prepend and have spaces
or empty lines in this code that force output before
header() is called.
There are two special-case header calls. The first is the
"Location" header. Not only does it send this header
back to the browser, it also returns a REDIRECT status code to
Apache. From a script writer's point of view this should not be
important, but for people who understand Apache internals it is
important to understand.
The second special-case is any header that starts with the
string, "HTTP/" (case is not significant). For
example, if you have your ErrorDocument 404 Apache directive
pointed to a PHP script, it would be a good idea to make sure
that your PHP script is actually generating a 404. The first
thing you do in your script should then be:
PHP scripts often generate dynamic HTML that must not be cached
by the client browser or any proxy caches between the server and the
client browser. Many proxies and clients can be forced to disable
caching with
See also headers_sent()