Yes, I am using IE 6.0.2600.0000IC, but it was redundant too and showed 
up when I loaded the page so I deleted the print header; after I wrote 
that e-mail.

> --- Kyle Babich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Ok, what you put didn't work for me for some reason.  I was getting 
> > some syntax errors.  I played with it a little bit and this is what 
I 
> > got to work:
> > 
> > #!/usr/bin/perl -wT
> > use strict;
> > use CGI qw/:standard/;
> > 
> > print "Content-type: text/html\n\n";
> > 
> > print header;
> 
> Kyle, is there any chance that you are using a recent version of 
Internet Explorer?  The two print
> lines that you have above will print almost the same thing (except 
that "header" also prints the
> charset, which is more correct.  The reason I ask if you are using a 
recent version of IE is
> because IE often does a lot of "error correcting" for you and will 
suppress the extra header,
> whereas Netscape and friends will display the second printing of the 
header in the browser window.
> 
> Note that headers end with two newlines, so the above should print 
this:
> 
>   Content-type: text/html
>  
>   Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1
> 
> Since two newlines indicate the end of the headers, the second 
content type header *should* be
> appearing in the browser window (yes, I'm being redundant, but I've 
got a lot of email to answer,
> so I want to make this brief :)
> 
> Cheers,
> Curtis "Ovid" Poe
> 
> 
> 
> =====
> "Ovid" on http://www.perlmonks.org/
> Someone asked me how to count to 10 in Perl:
> push@A,$_ for reverse q.e...q.n.;for(@A){$_=unpack
(q|c|,$_);@a=split//;
> shift@a;shift@a if $a[$[]eq$[;$_=join q||,@a};print $_,$/for reverse 
@A
> 
> __________________________________________________
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> http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com
> 
> 

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