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I've seen a couple questions around here like How to debug RESTful services, which mentions:

Unfortunately that same browser won't allow me to test HTTP PUT, DELETE, and to a certain degree even HTTP POST.

I've also heard this, that browsers support only GET and POST, from some other sources like:

However, a few quick tests in Firefox show that sending PUT and DELETE requests works as expected -- the XMLHttpRequest completes successfully, and the request shows up in the server logs with the right method. Is there some aspect to this I'm missing, such as cross-browser compatibility or non-obvious limitations?

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It's not just the client you need to worry about, lots of server side frameworks only support GET and POST. – derby Oct 3 '08 at 10:12
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John, any reason you don't want the REST tag? – John Saunders Aug 7 '11 at 19:29
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Because this question has nothing to do with REST. – John Millikin Sep 9 '11 at 4:17

7 Answers

up vote 186 down vote accepted

HTML forms (up to HTML version 4 and XHTML 1) only support GET and POST as HTTP request methods. A workaround for this is to tunnel other methods through POST by using a hidden form field which is read by the server and the request dispatched accordingly.

However, for the vast majority of RESTful web services GET, POST, PUT and DELETE should be sufficient. All these methods are supported by the implementations of XMLHttpRequest in all the major web browsers (IE, Firefox, Opera).

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"HTML (up to version 4 and XHTML 1)" <- I suppose you meant to say HTTP. Remember: HTML is a file format (such as .exe, .doc or .psd) and HTTP is a protocol for information exchange (such as HTML web pages, images or word .doc files). – Tom Oct 3 '08 at 12:28
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No, I definitely mean HTML (I'm talking about HTML forms capabilities although that may not be clear from the text - I'll edit it) – Matthew Murdoch Oct 3 '08 at 17:10
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@Matthew: does this mean that if i use IE6 or IE7, with the following :- <form .. method="PUT" >...</form> it will not work because PUT is not valid for HTML 4? – Pure.Krome Nov 2 '08 at 14:08
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@porneL @Alan HTML5 added them, and then removed them. Currently only GET and POST are allowed. goo.gl/8EuZk – Adam Lassek May 27 '11 at 20:04
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@porneL HTML5 added them, and then removed them, and now the bug is reopened. Interestingly, I've seen some documentation that still has them in there. Here's the bug if you want to follow along at home: w3.org/Bugs/Public/show_bug.cgi?id=10671 – Emil Lerch Oct 21 '11 at 17:43
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Read an in-depth analysis here: HTTP methods, Web browsers and XMLHttpRequest

He tested various HTTP Methods with Ajax calls from Fx, Opera and IE.

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HTML forms support GET and POST. (HTML5 at one point added PUT/DELETE, but those were dropped.)

XMLHttpRequest supports every method, including CHICKEN, though some method names are matched against case-insensitively (methods are case-sensitive per HTTP) and some method names are not supported at all for security reasons (e.g. CONNECT).

Browsers are slowly converging on the rules specified by XMLHttpRequest, but as the other comment pointed out there are still some differences.

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The latest HTML5 draft seems to have dropped PUT and DELETE support: dev.w3.org/html5/spec/Overview.html#attr-fs-method – Stefan Tilkov Oct 4 '10 at 20:35
I fixed the post. – Anne Oct 27 '10 at 13:36
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A draft has been proposed to get them back: amundsen.com/examples/put-delete-forms – Joost Baaij Aug 17 '11 at 21:33
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CHICKEN? The bird? I suppose you mean CHECKIN. That's a funny vowel swap. – JayC May 18 '12 at 20:56
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No I meant CHICKEN, illustrating it can be whatever you like. Agreed about the vowel swap being funny though :-) – Anne Jun 4 '12 at 13:11

XMLHttpRequest is a standard object in the JavaScript Object model.

It first appeared in Internet Explorer 5 as an ActiveX object, but has since been made into a standard and has been included for use in JavaScript in the Mozilla family since 1.0, Apple Safari 1.2, Opera 8.0, and IE 7.0.

The open() method on the object takes the HTTP Method as an argument - and is specified as taking any valid HTTP method - including GET, POST, HEAD, PUT and DELETE

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source needed ;) – naugtur Oct 4 '11 at 12:44
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is en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XMLHttpRequest#History_and_support source enough? – Vihung Feb 29 '12 at 11:05
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I hoped to see some pieces of documentation for further reading, I dodn't say I don't belive you. The links on wikipedia are quite nice actually. Thanks – naugtur Mar 1 '12 at 12:43

This page will show you which methods are supported by your current browser:

http://www.mnot.net/javascript/xmlhttprequest/

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I believe those comments refer specifically to the browsers, i.e., clicking links and submitting forms, not XMLHttpRequest. XMLHttpRequest is just a custom client that you wrote in JavaScript that uses the browser as a runtime.

UPDATE: To clarify, I did not mean (though I did write) that you wrote XMLHttpRequest; I meant that you wrote the code that uses XMLHttpRequest. The browsers do not natively support XMLHttpRequest. XMLHttpRequest comes from the JavaScript runtime, which may be hosted by a browser, although it isn't required to be (see Rhino). That's why people say browsers don't support PUT and DELETE—because it's actually JavaScript that is supporting them.

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XMLHttpRequest is a standard object in the JavaScript Object model. – Jacob Krall Oct 25 '08 at 17:14
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@Jacob True, but different browsers have different JavaScript engines. Knowing which ones support PUT is still helpful. – senfo Jan 17 '11 at 12:18

Just to add - Safari 2 and earlier definitely didn't support PUT and DELETE. I get the impression 3 did, but I don't have it around to test anymore. Safari 4 definitely does support PUT and DELETE.

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Can anyone confirm which version of Safari gained support for PUT and DELETE? – mjs Nov 17 '09 at 11:57

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