RSS enclosure
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
RSS enclosures are a way of attaching multimedia content to RSS feeds with the purpose of allowing that content to be prefetched.[1] Enclosures provide the URL of a file associated with an entry, such as an MP3 file to a music recommendation or a photo to a diary entry. Unlike e-mail attachments, enclosures are merely hyperlinks to files. The actual file data is not embedded into the feed (unless a data URL is used). Support and implementation among aggregators varies: if the software understands the specified file format, it may automatically download and display the content, otherwise provide a link to it or silently ignore it.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2017) |
The addition of enclosures to RSS, as first implemented by Dave Winer in late 2000 , was an important prerequisite for the emergence of podcasting, perhaps the most common use of the feature as of 2012[update]. In podcasts and related technologies enclosures are not merely attachments to entries, but provide the main content of a feed.
Syntax
In RSS 2.0, the syntax for the <enclosure> tag, an optional child of the <item> element, is as follows:
<enclosure url="http://example.com/file.mp3" length="123456789" type="audio/mpeg" />
where the value of the url attribute is a URL of a file, length is its size in bytes, and type its mime type.
It is recommended that only one <enclosure> element is included per <item>.[2]
Prefetching
The RSS <enclosure> has similarities to:
See also
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.