diff --git a/guide/src/qs_7.md b/guide/src/qs_7.md index 9b6649390..3e8694514 100644 --- a/guide/src/qs_7.md +++ b/guide/src/qs_7.md @@ -4,13 +4,13 @@ A builder-like pattern is used to construct an instance of `HttpResponse`. `HttpResponse` provides several methods that return a `HttpResponseBuilder` instance, -which implements various convenience methods that helps building responses. +which implements various convenience methods for building responses. > Check the [documentation](../actix_web/dev/struct.HttpResponseBuilder.html) > for type descriptions. -The methods `.body`, `.finish`, `.json` finalize response creation and -return a constructed *HttpResponse* instance. If this methods is called for the same +The methods `.body`, `.finish`, and `.json` finalize response creation and +return a constructed *HttpResponse* instance. If this methods is called on the same builder instance multiple times, the builder will panic. ```rust @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse { ## Content encoding -Actix automatically *compresses*/*decompresses* payloads. Following codecs are supported: +Actix automatically *compresses*/*decompresses* payloads. The following codecs are supported: * Brotli * Gzip @@ -40,11 +40,13 @@ If request headers contain a `Content-Encoding` header, the request payload is d according to the header value. Multiple codecs are not supported, i.e: `Content-Encoding: br, gzip`. Response payload is compressed based on the *content_encoding* parameter. -By default `ContentEncoding::Auto` is used. If `ContentEncoding::Auto` is selected, -then compression depends on the request's `Accept-Encoding` header. -`ContentEncoding::Identity` can be used to disable compression. -If another content encoding is selected, the compression is enforced for this codec. For example, -to enable `brotli` use `ContentEncoding::Br`: +By default, `ContentEncoding::Auto` is used. If `ContentEncoding::Auto` is selected, +then the compression depends on the request's `Accept-Encoding` header. + +> `ContentEncoding::Identity` can be used to disable compression. +> If another content encoding is selected, the compression is enforced for that codec. + +For example, to enable `brotli` use `ContentEncoding::Br`: ```rust # extern crate actix_web; @@ -62,10 +64,10 @@ fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse { There are several options for json body deserialization. -The first option is to use *Json* extractor. You define a handler function -that accepts `Json` as a parameter and use the `.with()` method for registering +The first option is to use *Json* extractor. First, you define a handler function +that accepts `Json` as a parameter, then, you use the `.with()` method for registering this handler. It is also possible to accept arbitrary valid json object by -using `serde_json::Value` as a type `T` +using `serde_json::Value` as a type `T`. ```rust # extern crate actix_web; @@ -89,7 +91,7 @@ fn main() { } ``` -The second option is to use *HttpResponse::json()*. This method returns a +Another option is to use *HttpResponse::json()*. This method returns a [*JsonBody*](../actix_web/dev/struct.JsonBody.html) object which resolves into the deserialized value. @@ -118,7 +120,7 @@ fn index(mut req: HttpRequest) -> Box> { # fn main() {} ``` -Alternatively, you can manually load the payload into memory and then deserialize it. +You may also manually load the payload into memory and then deserialize it. In the following example, we will deserialize a *MyObj* struct. We need to load the request body first and then deserialize the json into an object. @@ -158,8 +160,8 @@ fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> Box> { ## JSON Response The `Json` type allows to respond with well-formed JSON data: simply return a value of -type Json where T is the type of a structure to serialize into *JSON*. The -type `T` must implement the `Serialize` trait from *serde*. +type Json where `T` is the type of a structure to serialize into *JSON*. +The type `T` must implement the `Serialize` trait from *serde*. ```rust # extern crate actix_web; @@ -186,11 +188,11 @@ fn main() { Actix automatically decodes *chunked* encoding. `HttpRequest::payload()` already contains the decoded byte stream. If the request payload is compressed with one of the supported -compression codecs (br, gzip, deflate) the byte stream is decompressed. +compression codecs (br, gzip, deflate), then the byte stream is decompressed. -Chunked encoding on response can be enabled with `HttpResponseBuilder::chunked()`, -but this takes effect only for `Body::Streaming(BodyStream)` or `Body::StreamingContext` bodies. -Also, if the response payload compression is enabled and a streaming body is used, chunked encoding +Chunked encoding on a response can be enabled with `HttpResponseBuilder::chunked()`. +This takes effect only for `Body::Streaming(BodyStream)` or `Body::StreamingContext` bodies. +If the response payload compression is enabled and a streaming body is used, chunked encoding is enabled automatically. > Enabling chunked encoding for *HTTP/2.0* responses is forbidden. @@ -216,11 +218,11 @@ fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse { Actix provides multipart stream support. [*Multipart*](../actix_web/multipart/struct.Multipart.html) is implemented as -a stream of multipart items, each item can be a +a stream of multipart items. Each item can be a [*Field*](../actix_web/multipart/struct.Field.html) or a nested *Multipart* stream. `HttpResponse::multipart()` returns the *Multipart* stream for the current request. -Simple form multipart stream handling could be implemented like the following: +The following demonstrates multipart stream handling for a simple form: ```rust,ignore # extern crate actix_web;