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Shopify uses this code when the store has not paid their fees and is temporarily disabled. [14] Stripe uses this code for failed payments where parameters were correct, for example blocked fraudulent payments. [15] 403 Forbidden The request contained valid data and was understood by the server, but the server is refusing action.
However, if your code works with the content part of the page (the #mw-content-text element), you should use the 'wikipage.content' hook instead. This way your code will successfully reprocess the page when it is updated asynchronously and the hook is fired again. There are plenty of tools that do so, ranging from edit preview to watchlist ...
Use the API to fetch data in XML or JSON packaging The backup script dumpBackup.php dumps all the wiki pages into an XML file. dumpBackup.php only works on MediaWiki 1.5 or newer.
JSON-RPC (JavaScript Object Notation-Remote Procedure Call) is a remote procedure call (RPC) protocol encoded in JSON. It is similar to the XML-RPC protocol, defining only a few data types and commands.
JSON was based on a subset of the JavaScript scripting language (specifically, Standard ECMA-262 3rd Edition—December 1999 [11]) and is commonly used with JavaScript, but it is a language-independent data format. Code for parsing and generating JSON data is readily available in many programming languages.
curl is a command-line tool for getting or sending data including files using URL syntax. curl provides an interface to the libcurl library; it supports every protocol libcurl supports. [ 14 ] curl supports HTTPS and performs SSL certificate verification by default when a secure protocol is specified such as HTTPS.
The type of encoding used on the data. See HTTP compression. Content-Encoding: gzip: Permanent RFC 9110: Content-Length: The length of the request body in octets (8-bit bytes). Content-Length: 348: Permanent RFC 9110: Content-MD5: A Base64-encoded binary MD5 sum of the content of the request body. Content-MD5: Q2hlY2sgSW50ZWdyaXR5IQ== Obsolete [15]
Starting with HTML 4.0, forms can also submit data in multipart/form-data as defined in RFC 2388 (See also RFC 1867 for an earlier experimental version defined as an extension to HTML 2.0 and mentioned in HTML 3.2). The special case of a POST to the same page that the form belongs to is known as a postback.