GetStatusCode.com/303 will always return a 303 HTTP Status Code. That is by design.

303 See Other

Redirection

The 3XX class of codes are redirections. In a proper environment, you wouldn't see any of this content.
Status Code Details, Courtesy of Wikipedia

The response to the request can be found under another URI using a GET method. When received in response to a POST (or PUT/DELETE), it should be assumed that the server has received the data and the redirect should be issued with a separate GET message.

Available since HTTP/1.1

GetStatusCode Heatmap

Request Details

For easy reference, some of the details of your request have been included below.

IP Address Info

18.222.92.56

ec2-18-222-92-56.us-east-2.compute.amazonaws.com

  • 43215 Postal Code
  • Columbus City
  • Ohio State
  • United States Country
  • 39.9625 / -83.0061 IP Location

User Agent Info

Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)

  • Spider Device
  • ClaudeBot Browser
  • 1.0 Browser Version
  • Other OS
  • OS Version

GET

    POST

      About GetStatusCodes.com

      This is a tool that I built just to give me an easy way to test scripts that need to handle a variety of http status codes. Even if I'm not integrating with a REST API or other web service that might present a variety of status codes, I often still need to gracefully handle the occasional unexpected 500 error. Short of deliberately coding a glitch (which is only an option if I'm in control of the remote end, which isn't always the case), it's hard to test this. So, I wrote this handy site that responds with the appropriate header for the major codes.

      Whether you want to test code like I often do or just see an example 303 http status code, this is a handy tool to use. Plus, it offers some basic information that I occasionally need as well, like IP geolocation (and it even uses HTML5 geolocation to tell how far off they are from each other) and user agent parsing for browser and operating system.

      This tool is free to use, but you should be mindful of its limitations. It does not fully and properly implement the HTTP specification (it's not RESTful in the slightest). It only spits out this page (roughly, with some variation by code requested) and the associated HTTP status code headers. My scripts key off those response headers (as do most frameworks I've dealt with), so that's sufficient to test. But if you're expecting a 301 to actually include a Location header, you won't find it here.

      If you appreciate this tool, feel free to link to it, share it on Facebook, and the like. The more people use this, the more I can justify adding features.

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