<puzzled>

Hugo... ummm...

CFLOCATION to where? CFLOCATION does a client-side redirect via headers 
(similar to a meta redirect).

CFCONTENT sets the mime type of the content stream that gets returned to the 
browser (hence making a CFM template look like a JPG or a PDF).

Perhaps I'm missing something obvious, but I don't see how their 
functionality could be analagous.

Maybe a bit more explanation?

Laterz,
J
</puzzled>

On 5/16/05, Hugo Ahlenius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> Related to the IE hack thread:
> 
> When you do the little trick and refer to a cfm template in an <img> tag
> (for instance) to enable some logic processing (or rendering of a
> dynamic image) -- wouldn't it make much more sense to do a cflocation
> after the dynamic rendering? (as long as you don't need to play with any
> custom headers)
> 
> I just realized that this would work for some dynamic image generation
> (arcims) where the images would be stored on a web-accessible drive
> anyways -- and that this would enable some very good caching of dynamic
> images as well...
> 
> /H.
> 



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