What's the difference of ContentType and MimeType
Solution 1:
Why we use 2 different naming for (almost the same) thing? Is "Content-Type" just a name used in browser requests, and with very little use outside it?
What's the main difference between the each one, and when is right to call something mimetype as opposed to content-type ? Am i being pitty and grammar nazi?
The reason isn't only backward compatibility, and I'm afraid the usually excellent Django documentation is a bit hand-wavy about it. MIME (it's really worth reading at least the Wikipedia entry) has its origin in extending internet mail, and specifically SMTP. From there, the MIME and MIME-inspired extension design has found its way into a lot of other protocols (such as HTTP here), and is still being used when new kinds of metadata or data need to be transmitted in an existing protocol. There are dozens of RFCs that discuss MIME used for a plethora of purposes.
Specifically, Content-Type:
is one among several MIME headers. "Mimetype" does indeed sound obsolete, but a reference to MIME itself isn't. Call that part backward-compatibility, if you will.
[BTW, this is purely a terminology problem which has nothing whatsoever to do with grammar. Filing every usage question under "grammar" is a pet peeve of mine. Grrrr.]
Solution 2:
I've always viewed contentType to be a superset of mimeType. The only difference being the optional character set encoding. If the contentType does not include an optional character set encoding then it is identical to a mimeType. Otherwise, the mimeType is the data prior to the character set encoding sequence.
E.G. text/html; charset=UTF-8
text/html
is the mimeType;
is the additional parameters indicatorcharset=UTF-8
is the character set encoding parameter
E.G. application/msword
application/msword
is the mimeType
It cannot have a character set encoding as it describes a well formed octet-stream
not comprising characters directly.
Solution 3:
If you want to know the details see ticket 3526.
Quote:
Added content_type as an alias for mimetype to the HttpResponse constructor. It's a slightly more accurate name. Based on a patch from Simon Willison. Fully backwards compatible.