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When making a non-GET Inertia request manually or via a <Link> element, you should ensure that you always respond with a proper Inertia redirect response. For example, if your controller is creating a new user, your “store” endpoint should return a redirect back to a standard GET endpoint, such as your user “index” page. Inertia will automatically follow this redirect and update the page accordingly.
class UsersController extends Controller {  public function index()  {  return Inertia::render('Users/Index', [  'users' => User::all(),  ]);  }   public function store(Request $request)  {  User::create(  $request->validate([  'name' => ['required', 'max:50'],  'email' => ['required', 'max:50', 'email'],  ])  );   return to_route('users.index');  } } 

303 Response Code

When redirecting after a PUT, PATCH, or DELETE request, you must use a 303 response code, otherwise the subsequent request will not be treated as a GETrequest. A 303 redirect is very similar to a 302 redirect; however, the follow-up request is explicitly changed to a GET request. If you’re using one of our official server-side adapters, all redirects will automatically be converted to 303 redirects.

External Redirects

Sometimes it’s necessary to redirect to an external website, or even another non-Inertia endpoint in your app while handling an Inertia request. This can be accomplished using a server-side initiated window.location visit via the Inertia::location() method.
return Inertia::location($url); 
The Inertia::location() method will generate a 409 Conflict response and include the destination URL in the X-Inertia-Location header. When this response is received client-side, Inertia will automatically perform a window.location = url visit.