Okay great. So how does that help?
What about the code that produces the output?
Please, for the love of God, Allah, Vishna, Buddha & Lucifer - will you display the code that you use to obtain the data in the first place, also please show the code used to produce the output shown in the previous 2 posts.
I'm telling you what I need to help you. If you want help, you know what to do.
These excerpts you've shown do not correspond to one-another, and contribute nothing to the discussion.
You're using unspecified data - i.e I've not seen it, you're transforming it in an unspecified way, yet you want a specific answer. That's not going to happen in this country any time soon. Not unless you ask a politician that is.
Here, look - you've got two instance of VERY NEARLY the same string:
Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
and
"Content-Type" Content="text/html; charset=us-ascii"
The first appears in the block that appears to be displaying statistics about the packet.
The next appears to actually be content from that packet.
My ten dollars says that you've ripped someone else's code (make that $1000, the code 'works' and you've admitted to having no idea why) and have foolishly searched for the string as displayed in the statistics block, when you should be searching for the text found within the packet data,
This is the text you should be searching the packet data for:
"Content-Type" Content=
Note, you have to search for this string (including the quote marks) I forget if it's \" to include a quote character in the string - but you'll have to escape it in some way so that the quote marks don't signify the end of the string to the compiler.
Failing that, just search for "Content="
I HATE COPY/PASTE PROGRAMMING/ERS