usefor-article-09 February 2003
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4.2.3. White Space and Continuations
Each header is logically a single line of characters comprising the
header-name, the colon with its following SP, the content, and any
parameters. For convenience, however, the content and parameters can
be "folded" into a multiple line representation by inserting a CRLF
before any WSP contained within any FWS or CFWS (but not any other SP
or HTAB) allowed by this standard. For example, the header:
Approved: modname@modsite.example (Moderator of example.foo.bar)
can be represented as:
Approved: modname@modsite.example
(Moderator of example.foo.bar)
FWS occurs at many places in the syntax (usually within a CFWS) in
order to allow the inclusion of comments, whitespace and folding. The
syntax is in fact ambiguous insofar as it sometimes allows two
consecutive instantiations of FWS (as least one of which is always
optional), or of an optional FWS followed by an explicit CRLF.
However, all such cases MUST be treated as if the optional
instantiation (or one of them) had not been allowed. It is thus
precluded that any line of a header should be made up of whitespace
characters and nothing else (for such a line might otherwise have
been interpreted by a non-compliant agent as the separator between
the headers and the body of the article).
NOTE: This does not lead to semantic ambiguity because, unless
specifically stated otherwise, the presence or absence of
folding, a comment or additional WSP has no semantic meaning
and, in particular, it is a matter of indifference whether it
forms a part of the syntactic construct preceding it or the one
following it.
NOTE: It may be observed that the content part of every header
begins and ends with an optional CFWS (or FWS in the case of a
few headers). Moreover, every parameter also begins and ends
with an optional CFWS.
NOTE: Although contents are defined in such a way that folding
can take place between many of the lexical tokens (and even
within some of them), folding should be limited to placing the
CRLF at higher-level syntactic breaks, and should also avoid
leaving trailing WSP on the preceding line. For instance, if a
header-content is defined as comma-separated values, it is
recommended that folding occur after the comma separating the
values, even if it is allowed elsewhere.
In accordance with the syntax, the header-name on the first line MUST
be followed by a SP (even if the rest of the header is empty, but see
4.2.6). Even though the syntax allows otherwise, at least some of
the content MUST appear on that first line (to avoid the possibility
of harm by any non-compliant agent that might eliminate a trailing
WSP). Although posting agents are REQUIRED to enforce these
restrictions, relaying and serving agents SHOULD accept articles that
violate them.
NOTE: This standard differs from [RFC 2822] in requiring that SP
following the colon (it was also an [RFC 1036] requirement).
Posters and posting agents SHOULD use SP, not HTAB, where white space
is desired in headers (some existing software expects this). Relaying
and serving agents SHOULD accept HTAB in all such cases, however.
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#Diff to first older
--- ../usefor-article-08/White_Space_and_Continuations.out August 2002
+++ ../usefor-article-09/White_Space_and_Continuations.out February 2003
@@ -29,6 +29,7 @@
and, in particular, it is a matter of indifference whether it
forms a part of the syntactic construct preceding it or the one
following it.
+
NOTE: It may be observed that the content part of every header
begins and ends with an optional CFWS (or FWS in the case of a
few headers). Moreover, every parameter also begins and ends