why didn't I think of that?  guess i left my brain @ home again 2day.
thanks

John Brecht
Department of Physics and Astronomy
Michigan State University
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


----- Original Message -----
From: Jason Proctor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Java Apache Users <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, May 17, 1999 5:04 PM
Subject: Re: delimiters in parameters


> Why not use multiple parameters, and have your init() method iterate
> through them until it can't find any more?
>
> servlet.initArgs=url1=http://etc
> servlet.initArgs=url2=http://etc
> servlet.initArgs=url3=http://etc
>
> When init() gets a null return for url4, it knows it's out of parameters.
>
> Just my suggestion.
>
> J
>
>
>
> >That's kinda my point (that this doesn't have to be complicated).  I'm
> >talking about setting up a properties file and you tell me I somehow have
to
> >run an Encode within it.   I guess I'm just not getting my point across
and
> >it's not worth making a fuss over.   I think I'll just experiment with
> >delimiters until I find a safe one.  I thought this would be a trivial
> >matter, but I guess not.
> >
> >
> >John Brecht
> >Department of Physics and Astronomy
> >Michigan State University
> >[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >
> >----- Original Message -----
> >From: jon * <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >To: Java Apache Users <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >Sent: Monday, May 17, 1999 4:41 PM
> >Subject: Re: delimiters in parameters
> >
> >
> >> > So, I would write an app that does the Encode, run it on the URLs I
want
> >to
> >> > include, Serialize the result and save it to a file, and put a
pointer
> >to
> >> > that file in the parameters section of the zone.properties file?
Please
> >> > explain.
> >>
> >> Sure, that sounds like a good idea. or even easier, write a program
that
> >> does a System.out.println of the encoded string urls and that data is
then
> >> copy/pasted into your .initArgs file or placed into the properties file
> >for
> >> that zone.
> >>
> >> String url1 = "http://www.clearink.com/";
> >> String url2 = "http://www.working-dogs.com/";
> >> System.out.print( java.net.URLEncoder.encode("url=" + url1) + "&" +
> >> java.net.URLEncoder.encode("url=" + url2) );
> >>
> >> With the above example in mind, now all you have to do is run
> >> org.apache.jserv.JServUtils.URLDecode() to get a Hashtable. That
Hashtable
> >> will have a key of "url" which is a String[].
> >>
> >> Or, you can get more complicated and write the URL's in an XML with a
DTD
> >> and use www.openxml.org's parser to create XML model that you can loop
> >over.
> >> But, that seems like a lot of extra work to me.
> >>
> >> -jon
> >>
> >>
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> >
> >
> >
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