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HTML and XHTML
This technique relates to:
The objective of this technique is to enable redirects on the client side without confusing the user. Redirects are preferably implemented on the server side (see SVR1: Implementing automatic redirects on the server side instead of on the client side (SERVER) ), but authors do not always have control over server-side technologies.
In HTML and XHTML, one can use the meta element with the value of
the http-equiv attribute set to "Refresh" and the value of the
content attribute set to "0" (meaning zero seconds), followed by the URL
that the browser should request. It is important that the time-out is set to zero, to
avoid that content is displayed before the new page is loaded. The page containing the
redirect code should only contain information related to the redirect.
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<title>The Tudors</title>
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;URL='http://thetudors.example.com/'" />
</head>
<body>
<p>This page has moved to a <a href="http://thetudors.example.com/">
theTudors.example.com</a>.</p>
</body>
</html>
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Find all meta elements in the document.
For each meta element, check if it contains the attribute
http-equiv with value "refresh" (case-insensitive) and the
content attribute with a number greater than 0 followed by
;'URL=anyURL' (where anyURL stands for the URL that should replace
the current page).
Step 2 is false.