//JSON Example
{"employees":[
{ "firstName":"John", "lastName":"Doe" },
{ "firstName":"Anna", "lastName":"Smith" },
{ "firstName":"Peter", "lastName":"Jones" }
]}
//XML Example
<employees>
<employee>
<firstName>John</firstName> <lastName>Doe</lastName>
</employee>
<employee>
<firstName>Anna</firstName> <lastName>Smith</lastName>
</employee>
<employee>
<firstName>Peter</firstName> <lastName>Jones</lastName>
</employee>
</employees>
These are 2 common formats that we use when exchanging data across the web:
-- eXtensible Markup Language (XML) has been in use for a very long time and is
best suited for exchanging document-style data
-- when programs just want to exchange dictionaries, lists, or other internal
information with each other, they use JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)
POST /download
Host: user-agents.net
browser=samsung-browser&version=16-0&browser_type=browser&download=json