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Anonymous Customer
2018-08-14
I am happy with PDFfiller for the most part. It is a very good editor that makes a normal document look sophisticated. My only complaint is the price. 15$ a month for this? I mean it is a good editor, but 175$ a year is to much for me. Overall, it is a great app for editing with a great package of fun.
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2017-11-24
As a real estate broker, I have used the PDF Filler to fill out contracts and personal forms. Ease of use. I was able to figure out how the software worked and used it within 15 minutes. This was great because I needed it as soon as I could get it working! I honestly believe the software can be figured out easily by the vast majority of people. If not, they should be able to get assistance easily.
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Below is a list of the most common customer questions. If you can’t find an answer to your question, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us.
Open Internet Information Service (IIS) Manager. Right-click the site you want to enable CORS for and go to Properties. Change to the HTTP Headers tab. In the Custom HTTP headers section, click Add. Enter Access-Control-Allow-Origin as the header name. Enter * as the header value. Click Ok twice.
The Accept header describes which format you want a response body to arrive as. For example, responses can be delivered either as XML or JSON by modifying the Accept header. This header is required in all requests.
If there's no Host header field, you may not get the results you were hoping for if the destination server is a virtual host that doesn't have its own IP address to distinguish itself from other virtual hosts. HTTP 1.1 requires the Host field. None of the HTTP Headers are required in a Request.
With an unsecured connection, there is no Server Name Indication at all, so the host header is still valid (and necessary). In the MDN Documentation on the Host-Header they actually phrase it like this: A Host header field must be sent in all HTTP/1.1 request messages.
HTTP 1.1 requests often include a Host: header, which contains the hostname from the client request. This is because a server may use a single IP address or interface to accept requests for multiple DNS hostnames. The Host: header identifies the server requested by the client.
There are circumstances under which particular headers can be required, for example: An origin server that does not support persistent connections MUST send the Connection: close in every response that does not have a 1xx status code.
The Host request header specifies the host and port number of the server to which the request is being sent. If no port is included, the default port for the service requested (e.g., 443 for an HTTPS URL, and 80 for an HTTP URL) is implied. A Host header field must be sent in all HTTP/1.1 request messages.
14.1 Accept The Accept request-header field can be used to specify certain media types which are acceptable for the response. Accept headers can be used to indicate that the request is specifically limited to a small set of desired types, as in the case of a request for an in-line image.
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