Well, it's pretty simple.  I normally don't put the <> around tags in
e-mail cuz I don't know for certain how some readers would view them...
some might actually try to implement the proceedure the tag would
normally invoke.

So the answer is MAP and XMS with the <> around them making them tags.

l.d.
====

On Mon, 12 Mar 2001 20:29:10 -0500, Samuel W. Heywood wrote:

> On Mon, 12 Mar 2001 19:24:09 -0500, L.D. Best wrote:

>> I ran across a tutorial on putting maps on a webpage.  Looks good,
>> except for one problem.

>> I don't know if the problem is page designer's or Arachne's ...
>> but where he has XMS and MAP tags I can't see a darned thing using
>> 1.70r3.  :<

>> Does Arachne normally handle XMS & MAP tags properly?  I can't recall
>> even seeing them before, but if a map is working I'd have no reason to
>> look at the code.

> Please explain what you mean by MAP tags, or please just refer me to a
> URL where I can examine such tags.  I have never heard of such.  What
> are they supposed to do?  Certainly I would not imagine that they would
> have anything to do with displaying a graphic representation of some
> geography or some line drawing on a web page because you can easily do
> that with just an ordinary image file.

-- Arachne V1.70;rev.3, NON-COMMERCIAL copy, http://arachne.cz/

Reply via email to