HTTP 204 No Content vs 400 Bad Request
HTTP 204 (No Content) is a 2xx Success response, while 400 (Bad Request) is a 4xx Client Error response. 204 indicates that the server successfully processed the request but is not returning any content. Common for DELETE operations and form submissions that don't need a response body. In contrast, 400 means that the server cannot process the request due to malformed syntax, invalid request message framing, or deceptive request routing.
Description
The server successfully processed the request but is not returning any content. Common for DELETE operations and form submissions that don't need a response body.
When You See It
After DELETE requests, PUT updates where no body is needed, or CORS preflight responses.
How to Fix
No fix needed. The action was successful; there is simply no content to return.
Description
The server cannot process the request due to malformed syntax, invalid request message framing, or deceptive request routing.
When You See It
When sending malformed JSON, missing required fields, or invalid query parameters.
How to Fix
Check the request body format, validate all required fields, and ensure proper encoding.
Key Differences
204 is a 2xx Success response, while 400 is a 4xx Client Error response.
HTTP 204: The server successfully processed the request but is not returning any content. Common for DELETE operations and form submissions that don't need a response body.
HTTP 400: The server cannot process the request due to malformed syntax, invalid request message framing, or deceptive request routing.
You encounter 204 when after DELETE requests, PUT updates where no body is needed, or CORS preflight responses.
You encounter 400 when when sending malformed JSON, missing required fields, or invalid query parameters.
When to Use Which
For 204 (No Content): No fix needed. The action was successful; there is simply no content to return. For 400 (Bad Request): Check the request body format, validate all required fields, and ensure proper encoding.