From: Solomon D. <sd...@gm...> - 2011-01-17 12:58:41
|
One of the benefits of REST patterns is that you can mix of different client & server technologies. With this approach, you can use a browser, a Java client, a Perl client... anything that supports HTTP. If you want to use the "Content-Disposition" as Jozef suggested, you'll probably have to use a Response builder: http://docs.jboss.org/resteasy/docs/1.0.0.GA/javadocs/javax/ws/rs/core/Response.ResponseBuilder.html Possibly (Response.ok().header("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=<fname.ext>") -Solomon On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 4:40 AM, Lukasz Lenart <luk...@go... > wrote: > 2011/1/17 Michael Brackx <mic...@gm...>: > > You can return a byte[] or InputStream for example > > > > @Path("path") > > @GET > > public InputStream get() { > > ... > > } > > Thank, right now I'm returning byte[] but I must return a file name also. > > > Or if you need to set headers, return a Response. > > Is the Response compatible with non-Java REST clients ? > > > Kind regards > -- > Łukasz > + 48 606 323 122 http://www.lenart.org.pl/ > Kapituła Javarsovia http://javarsovia.pl > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Protect Your Site and Customers from Malware Attacks > Learn about various malware tactics and how to avoid them. Understand > malware threats, the impact they can have on your business, and how you > can protect your company and customers by using code signing. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/oracle-sfdevnl > _______________________________________________ > Resteasy-developers mailing list > Res...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/resteasy-developers > |