-sigh-
Well, at least thats a clear cut answer ;)
Pitty.
Guess I'll have to use a "click here to get url" button and try to
restructure any outgoing links pointing back to use a ? query for the
search engines sake.


2009/6/29 Ian Bambury <ianbamb...@gmail.com>:
> You can't do it. The server doesn't get sent the stuff from the # onwards.
> Ian
>
> http://examples.roughian.com
>
>
> 2009/6/28 darkflame <darkfl...@gmail.com>
>>
>> Ive been building a dynamic website, with the content displayed chosen
>> by the current contents of the history/bookmark token at the end of
>> the url.
>> eg.
>> /main.html#DisplayReview=220
>>
>> This works great, as the whole site doesn't have to be refreshed,
>> hugely reducing bandwidth for me and speeding up the site for the
>> users. This is, of course,whats recommended to do.
>>
>> My site is also, so far, completely bookmarkable this way. URLs link
>> directly to the current state of the app....as it should. My users
>> should be able to swap links just like any other site.
>>
>> Problem is, I want the site to happly work when javascript is disabled
>> as well. If nothing else, this is needed for search-engines to index
>> it correctly. So I needed a way for php to display the same content
>> from the same links....
>> ...only to find, to my horror, php cant seem to access anything past
>> the "#"...its as good as invisible!
>>
>> HELP!!!
>>
>> Even hiding it in a query string dosnt work
>> ( /main?blah#DisplayReview=220.....only the blah is detected).
>>
>> Now, I cant change my #'s links to ?'s...as dynamic query string
>> changes make the page reload, and it would completely break my history-
>> support.
>>
>> So I'm left a bit puzzled as to what I can do.
>>
>> How can I keep the sites states bookmarkable, but also have those same
>> URLs readable by php?
>> I really dont want to resort to an extra "click to get url" unless I
>> absolutely have too.  (and besides, wouldnt that also mess up search
>> engine indexing? )
>>
>> Ive got a vague idea that .htaccess voodoo might help me out.
>>
>> Maybe htaccess can itself see the # data when the user requests the
>> url, and dynamically change it to a ?. (?)
>>
>> I'm not hot with htaccess at all, so it might not be able to do
>> either, then I really am stuck.
>>
>> I know htaccess stuff isnt strictly ontopic, but I'm asking here
>> because it seems like a common problem people building gwt sites would
>> have.
>> Unfortunately googleing this stuff is useless....(# and ? arnt exactly
>> mySQL-based search engine friendly querys...google dosnt seem to
>> support escaping your searchs).
>>
>> ..so I hope someone here can help.
>>
>>
>> I also hope I made myself clear.
>>
>
>
> >
>

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