HTTP headers allow the client and the server to pass additional information with the request or the response. A request header consists of its case-insensitive name followed by a colon ':', then by its value (without line breaks). Leading white space before the value is ignored.
<head> section doesn't contain any styles.
Name | Value |
---|---|
Link #1 | |
rel | icon |
href | /favicon.ico |
type | image/x-icon |
Link #2 | |
rel | shortcut icon |
href | /favicon.ico |
type | image/x-icon |
Link #3 | |
rel | stylesheet |
href | /css/red/ui.css |
type | text/css |
charset | utf-8 |
Link #4 | |
rel | stylesheet |
href | /css/easydesign_red.css |
type | text/css |
charset | utf-8 |
<head> section doesn't contain any internal script sections.
Name | Value |
---|---|
Script #1 | |
src | //code.jquery.com/jquery-1.11.3.min.js |
Script #2 | |
src | //code.jquery.com/jquery-migrate-1.2.1.min.js |
type | text/javascript |
charset | utf-8 |
Script #3 | |
src | //code.jquery.com/ui/1.11.4/jquery-ui.min.js |
Script #4 | |
src | /js/lan.en.js |
type | text/javascript |
charset | utf-8 |
Script #5 | |
src | /js/easydesign_common.js |
type | text/javascript |
charset | utf-8 |
<head> section doesn't contain a base section.