Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
and use "?" as the separator not "&" ... Stephan - Original Message - From: Stephan Kassanke To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, December 17, 2001 3:04 PM Subject: Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 Hi Cyril, we had a similar problem, the solution is simple: just put a dummy parameter at the end, like http://www.somewhere.com/myjsp.jsp&dummy=my.pdf This will cause IE 5.0 to display the pdf in the browser. Stephan - Original Message - From: Cyril Rognon To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 2:43 PM Subject: Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 It has been reported many times that IE5.0 needs some strong mime type information : not only you must set the content-type HTTP header to "application/pdf" but you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end... Cyril RognonAt 14:05 07/12/2001 +0100, you wrote: I'm trying to see a pdf-report, created dinamically with an XML-XSL process. But if I try to see it with an IE 5.0, I see just a blank page with an icon. If I try it with an IE 5.5, I can see it with no problem. Why is it? And there is a solution, because I cannot change the browser to 5.5?
Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
Hi Cyril, we had a similar problem, the solution is simple: just put a dummy parameter at the end, like http://www.somewhere.com/myjsp.jsp&dummy=my.pdf This will cause IE 5.0 to display the pdf in the browser. Stephan - Original Message - From: Cyril Rognon To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 2:43 PM Subject: Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 It has been reported many times that IE5.0 needs some strong mime type information : not only you must set the content-type HTTP header to "application/pdf" but you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end... Cyril RognonAt 14:05 07/12/2001 +0100, you wrote: I'm trying to see a pdf-report, created dinamically with an XML-XSL process. But if I try to see it with an IE 5.0, I see just a blank page with an icon. If I try it with an IE 5.5, I can see it with no problem. Why is it? And there is a solution, because I cannot change the browser to 5.5?
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
Thank you very much for the example. But I receive an TransformerException in this line DOMResult foDomResult = new DOMResult(); transformer.transform(xml, foDomResult); foDoc = (Document)foDomResult.getNode(); Do you have any idea why it is? Thank you very much, again. Raúl - Original Message - From: Savino, Matt C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 8:18 PM Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 > Jim, I've attached the servlet that we use to handle a simlar issue issue to> what you describe. This serlvet handles both HTML and PDF requests and calls> either method based on a parameter in the user's session (which could just> as easily be in the request). Maybe it will help.> > > -Original Message-> > From: Jim Urban [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]> > Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 11:02 AM> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0> > > > > > Here is the real problem. When the servlet is posted to, the > > browser has no> > knowledge of what type of data will be sent back. We have a > > single servlet> > which looks at the request and calls the appropriate class to > > process the> > request. The request then sends XML back to the servlet. > > Then based upon> > the presence of the parameter "print" in the http request, our servlet> > attempts to locate the XSL:FO file that maps to the request. > > If the XSL:FO> > file is found, we FOP the XML and send back PDF. Otherwise we use a> > XSL:HTML file and send back a HTML page. Our clients are > > responsible for> > providing XSL:FO files for the pages they want PDF prints. > > The XSL:FO files> > are optional and may or may not exist.> > > > Jim> > > > -Original Message-> > From: Alex McLintock [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]> > Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 11:05 AM> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0> > > > > > --- Jim Urban <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > you also > > have to use an> > url with ".pdf" at the> > end> > > The url the client is posting to is a servlet which uses > > FOP to generate a> > > PDF and feed it back to the browser. If the client post a > > request to> > > myservlet.pdf the server will look for a file called > > myservlet.pdf and> > > return a 403 when it can't find it. So how do you use a > > url that ends> > with> > > .pdf when using servlets?> > > > If you can't set up an alias in the webserver as people have > > suggested you> > could> > always have a servlet class called "pdf" within a package "myservlet".> > End result: myservlet.pdf> > > > > > > > > > > > Could have sworn this was in the FAQ.> > > > Oh dear - that means the FAQ isn't good enough yet> > > > > > Alex> > > > > > => > Alex McLintock [EMAIL PROTECTED] Open Source > > Consultancy in London> > OpenWeb Analysts Ltd, http://www.OWAL.co.uk/> > ---> > SF and Computing Book News and Reviews: http://news.diversebooks.com/> > Get Your XML T-Shirt at http://www.inversity.co.uk/> > COMPETITION : > http://news.diversebooks.com/article.pl?sid=01/10/08/1947255> > > Nokia 5510 looks weird sounds great.> Go to http://uk.promotions.yahoo.com/nokia/ discover and win it!> The competition ends 16 th of December 2001.> > -> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > -> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > > -> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 | Specification of folder for XML/XSL files under Cocoon 2
Yes, that syntax works definitively and was used by us as long as we utilized FOP under Cocoon 1. Cocoon 2 does not present this url problem any more. It presents another one, though: XML files cannot be specified to lie in _any_ folder (Windows version of Tomcat/Cocoon), they must be placed in a specific location deep down in the file system, under "Tomcat\webapps\cocoon..." (at least, this is our sys admin's statement). We find this a slightly cumbersome solution. Has anybody made a contrasting (=better) experience? Matthias -Original Message- From: James Richardson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 4:05 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 Jim Urban wrote: So how do you use a url that ends > with .pdf when using servlets? > I think you can do http://any.url/servlets/Blah?stuff=.pdf but not certain James - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
Sorry, I jumped into the middle of that thread and hadn't noticed the piece about IE 5.0 requiring the specific extension. Any possibility your user community will upgrade their browser for this (and other) considerations? Joe "Jim Urban" steps.net>cc: Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 12/07/2001 02:51 PM Please respond to fop-dev You are correct, we set the content type to PDF before sending anything back. The problem is how to invoke this servlet and use a .PDF extension when we don't know we are going to get a PDF back. Jim -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 1:14 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 Do you write to the servlet response before you decide whether "this is a job for FOP" . (Sorry) If the response to the browser hasn't begun, I think you should be able to call setContentType("application/pdf") on the ServletResponse instance as soon as you find the XSL:FO file. It's up to the browser then to handle the incoming mime type. Or am I missing the point entirely? Joe "Jim Urban" steps.net> cc: Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 12/07/2001 02:01 PM Please respond to fop-dev Here is the real problem. When the servlet is posted to, the browser has no knowledge of what type of data will be sent back. We have a single servlet which looks at the request and calls the appropriate class to process the request. The request then sends XML back to the servlet. Then based upon the presence of the parameter "print" in the http request, our servlet attempts to locate the XSL:FO file that maps to the request. If the XSL:FO file is found, we FOP the XML and send back PDF. Otherwise we use a XSL:HTML file and send back a HTML page. Our clients are responsible for providing XSL:FO files for the pages they want PDF prints. The XSL:FO files are optional and may or may not exist. Jim -Original Message- From: Alex McLintock [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 11:05 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 --- Jim Urban <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end > The url the client is posting to is a servlet which uses FOP to generate a > PDF and feed it back to the browser. If the client post a request to > myservlet.pdf the server will look for a file called myservlet.pdf and > return a 403 when it can't find it. So how do you use a url that ends with > .pdf when using servlets? If you can't set up an alias in the webserver as people have suggested you could always have a servlet class called "pdf" within a package "myservlet". End result: myservlet.pdf Could have sworn this was in the FAQ. Oh dear - that means the FAQ isn't good enough yet Alex = Alex McLintock[EMAIL PROTECTED]Open Source Consultancy in London OpenWeb Analysts Ltd, http://www.OWAL.co.uk/ --- SF and Computing Book News and Reviews: http://news.diversebooks.com/ Get Your XML T-Shirt at http://www.inversity.co.uk/ COMPETITION : http://news.diversebooks.com/article.pl?sid=01/10/08/1947255 Nokia 5510 looks weird sounds great. Go to http://uk.promotions.yahoo.com/nokia/ discover and win it! The competition ends 16 th of December 2001. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTE
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
You are correct, we set the content type to PDF before sending anything back. The problem is how to invoke this servlet and use a .PDF extension when we don't know we are going to get a PDF back. Jim -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 1:14 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 Do you write to the servlet response before you decide whether "this is a job for FOP" . (Sorry) If the response to the browser hasn't begun, I think you should be able to call setContentType("application/pdf") on the ServletResponse instance as soon as you find the XSL:FO file. It's up to the browser then to handle the incoming mime type. Or am I missing the point entirely? Joe "Jim Urban" steps.net>cc: Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 12/07/2001 02:01 PM Please respond to fop-dev Here is the real problem. When the servlet is posted to, the browser has no knowledge of what type of data will be sent back. We have a single servlet which looks at the request and calls the appropriate class to process the request. The request then sends XML back to the servlet. Then based upon the presence of the parameter "print" in the http request, our servlet attempts to locate the XSL:FO file that maps to the request. If the XSL:FO file is found, we FOP the XML and send back PDF. Otherwise we use a XSL:HTML file and send back a HTML page. Our clients are responsible for providing XSL:FO files for the pages they want PDF prints. The XSL:FO files are optional and may or may not exist. Jim -Original Message- From: Alex McLintock [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 11:05 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 --- Jim Urban <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end > The url the client is posting to is a servlet which uses FOP to generate a > PDF and feed it back to the browser. If the client post a request to > myservlet.pdf the server will look for a file called myservlet.pdf and > return a 403 when it can't find it. So how do you use a url that ends with > .pdf when using servlets? If you can't set up an alias in the webserver as people have suggested you could always have a servlet class called "pdf" within a package "myservlet". End result: myservlet.pdf Could have sworn this was in the FAQ. Oh dear - that means the FAQ isn't good enough yet Alex = Alex McLintock[EMAIL PROTECTED]Open Source Consultancy in London OpenWeb Analysts Ltd, http://www.OWAL.co.uk/ --- SF and Computing Book News and Reviews: http://news.diversebooks.com/ Get Your XML T-Shirt at http://www.inversity.co.uk/ COMPETITION : http://news.diversebooks.com/article.pl?sid=01/10/08/1947255 Nokia 5510 looks weird sounds great. Go to http://uk.promotions.yahoo.com/nokia/ discover and win it! The competition ends 16 th of December 2001. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
Jim, I've attached the servlet that we use to handle a simlar issue issue to what you describe. This serlvet handles both HTML and PDF requests and calls either method based on a parameter in the user's session (which could just as easily be in the request). Maybe it will help. > -Original Message- > From: Jim Urban [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 11:02 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 > > > Here is the real problem. When the servlet is posted to, the > browser has no > knowledge of what type of data will be sent back. We have a > single servlet > which looks at the request and calls the appropriate class to > process the > request. The request then sends XML back to the servlet. > Then based upon > the presence of the parameter "print" in the http request, our servlet > attempts to locate the XSL:FO file that maps to the request. > If the XSL:FO > file is found, we FOP the XML and send back PDF. Otherwise we use a > XSL:HTML file and send back a HTML page. Our clients are > responsible for > providing XSL:FO files for the pages they want PDF prints. > The XSL:FO files > are optional and may or may not exist. > > Jim > > -Original Message- > From: Alex McLintock [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 11:05 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 > > > --- Jim Urban <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > you also > have to use an > url with ".pdf" at the > end > > The url the client is posting to is a servlet which uses > FOP to generate a > > PDF and feed it back to the browser. If the client post a > request to > > myservlet.pdf the server will look for a file called > myservlet.pdf and > > return a 403 when it can't find it. So how do you use a > url that ends > with > > .pdf when using servlets? > > If you can't set up an alias in the webserver as people have > suggested you > could > always have a servlet class called "pdf" within a package "myservlet". > End result: myservlet.pdf > > > > > > Could have sworn this was in the FAQ. > > Oh dear - that means the FAQ isn't good enough yet > > > Alex > > > = > Alex McLintock[EMAIL PROTECTED]Open Source > Consultancy in London > OpenWeb Analysts Ltd, http://www.OWAL.co.uk/ > --- > SF and Computing Book News and Reviews: http://news.diversebooks.com/ > Get Your XML T-Shirt at http://www.inversity.co.uk/ > COMPETITION : http://news.diversebooks.com/article.pl?sid=01/10/08/1947255 Nokia 5510 looks weird sounds great. Go to http://uk.promotions.yahoo.com/nokia/ discover and win it! The competition ends 16 th of December 2001. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ReportGeneratorServlet.java Description: Binary data - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
Do you write to the servlet response before you decide whether "this is a job for FOP" . (Sorry) If the response to the browser hasn't begun, I think you should be able to call setContentType("application/pdf") on the ServletResponse instance as soon as you find the XSL:FO file. It's up to the browser then to handle the incoming mime type. Or am I missing the point entirely? Joe "Jim Urban" steps.net>cc: Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 12/07/2001 02:01 PM Please respond to fop-dev Here is the real problem. When the servlet is posted to, the browser has no knowledge of what type of data will be sent back. We have a single servlet which looks at the request and calls the appropriate class to process the request. The request then sends XML back to the servlet. Then based upon the presence of the parameter "print" in the http request, our servlet attempts to locate the XSL:FO file that maps to the request. If the XSL:FO file is found, we FOP the XML and send back PDF. Otherwise we use a XSL:HTML file and send back a HTML page. Our clients are responsible for providing XSL:FO files for the pages they want PDF prints. The XSL:FO files are optional and may or may not exist. Jim -Original Message- From: Alex McLintock [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 11:05 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 --- Jim Urban <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end > The url the client is posting to is a servlet which uses FOP to generate a > PDF and feed it back to the browser. If the client post a request to > myservlet.pdf the server will look for a file called myservlet.pdf and > return a 403 when it can't find it. So how do you use a url that ends with > .pdf when using servlets? If you can't set up an alias in the webserver as people have suggested you could always have a servlet class called "pdf" within a package "myservlet". End result: myservlet.pdf Could have sworn this was in the FAQ. Oh dear - that means the FAQ isn't good enough yet Alex = Alex McLintock[EMAIL PROTECTED]Open Source Consultancy in London OpenWeb Analysts Ltd, http://www.OWAL.co.uk/ --- SF and Computing Book News and Reviews: http://news.diversebooks.com/ Get Your XML T-Shirt at http://www.inversity.co.uk/ COMPETITION : http://news.diversebooks.com/article.pl?sid=01/10/08/1947255 Nokia 5510 looks weird sounds great. Go to http://uk.promotions.yahoo.com/nokia/ discover and win it! The competition ends 16 th of December 2001. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
Here is the real problem. When the servlet is posted to, the browser has no knowledge of what type of data will be sent back. We have a single servlet which looks at the request and calls the appropriate class to process the request. The request then sends XML back to the servlet. Then based upon the presence of the parameter "print" in the http request, our servlet attempts to locate the XSL:FO file that maps to the request. If the XSL:FO file is found, we FOP the XML and send back PDF. Otherwise we use a XSL:HTML file and send back a HTML page. Our clients are responsible for providing XSL:FO files for the pages they want PDF prints. The XSL:FO files are optional and may or may not exist. Jim -Original Message- From: Alex McLintock [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 11:05 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0 --- Jim Urban <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end > The url the client is posting to is a servlet which uses FOP to generate a > PDF and feed it back to the browser. If the client post a request to > myservlet.pdf the server will look for a file called myservlet.pdf and > return a 403 when it can't find it. So how do you use a url that ends with > .pdf when using servlets? If you can't set up an alias in the webserver as people have suggested you could always have a servlet class called "pdf" within a package "myservlet". End result: myservlet.pdf Could have sworn this was in the FAQ. Oh dear - that means the FAQ isn't good enough yet Alex = Alex McLintock[EMAIL PROTECTED]Open Source Consultancy in London OpenWeb Analysts Ltd, http://www.OWAL.co.uk/ --- SF and Computing Book News and Reviews: http://news.diversebooks.com/ Get Your XML T-Shirt at http://www.inversity.co.uk/ COMPETITION : http://news.diversebooks.com/article.pl?sid=01/10/08/1947255 Nokia 5510 looks weird sounds great. Go to http://uk.promotions.yahoo.com/nokia/ discover and win it! The competition ends 16 th of December 2001. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
--- Jim Urban <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end > The url the client is posting to is a servlet which uses FOP to generate a > PDF and feed it back to the browser. If the client post a request to > myservlet.pdf the server will look for a file called myservlet.pdf and > return a 403 when it can't find it. So how do you use a url that ends with > .pdf when using servlets? If you can't set up an alias in the webserver as people have suggested you could always have a servlet class called "pdf" within a package "myservlet". End result: myservlet.pdf Could have sworn this was in the FAQ. Oh dear - that means the FAQ isn't good enough yet Alex = Alex McLintock[EMAIL PROTECTED]Open Source Consultancy in London OpenWeb Analysts Ltd, http://www.OWAL.co.uk/ --- SF and Computing Book News and Reviews: http://news.diversebooks.com/ Get Your XML T-Shirt at http://www.inversity.co.uk/ COMPETITION : http://news.diversebooks.com/article.pl?sid=01/10/08/1947255 Nokia 5510 looks weird sounds great. Go to http://uk.promotions.yahoo.com/nokia/ discover and win it! The competition ends 16 th of December 2001. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
That's the trick if you have to use .pdf ended url, use the query string like Jamestold you to. This is a particular IE5.0 pb, and some times it does not appear, the response content type may be enough. Cyril Rognon At 15:05 07/12/2001 +, you wrote: >Jim Urban wrote: > >So how do you use a url that ends >>with .pdf when using servlets? > > >I think you can do > >http://any.url/servlets/Blah?stuff=.pdf > >but not certain > >James - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
You should be able to create a directory to servlet mapping in your web server (usually in the web.xml file). Something like: MyServlet /MyServletDir MyServlet MyPdfGeneratingServlet Then the browser can call www.myserver.com/MyServletDir/filename.pdf Your servlet can retrieve the filename requested from the HttpServletRequest (or just ignore it) and output it's response to the HttpServletResponse --- Paul Smith > Jim Urban wrote: > > So how do you use a url that ends with .pdf when using servlets? *** DISCLAIMER: The information contained in this email is confidential and is intended solely for the use of the named addressee. Access, copying or re-use of the information in it by any other person is not authorised. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
Jim Urban wrote: So how do you use a url that ends > with .pdf when using servlets? > I think you can do http://any.url/servlets/Blah?stuff=.pdf but not certain James - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
> you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end The url the client is posting to is a servlet which uses FOP to generate a PDF and feed it back to the browser. If the client post a request to myservlet.pdf the server will look for a file called myservlet.pdf and return a 403 when it can't find it. So how do you use a url that ends with .pdf when using servlets? Jim -Original Message-From: Cyril Rognon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 7:43 AMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0It has been reported many times that IE5.0 needs some strong mime type information : not only you must set the content-type HTTP header to "application/pdf" but you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end... Cyril RognonAt 14:05 07/12/2001 +0100, you wrote: I'm trying to see a pdf-report, created dinamically with an XML-XSL process. But if I try to see it with an IE 5.0, I see just a blank page with an icon. If I try it with an IE 5.5, I can see it with no problem. Why is it? And there is a solution, because I cannot change the browser to 5.5?
Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
All my urls are .jsp and I don't have a problem with IE 4-5-6 recognizing them as PDF--as long as I set the response contentType. I have a myriad of other problems with older verisons of IE, but this is not one of them. Cyril Rognon wrote: > > It has been reported many times that IE5.0 needs some strong mime type > information > : not only you must set the content-type HTTP header to > "application/pdf" but you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the > end... > > Cyril Rognon > > At 14:05 07/12/2001 +0100, you wrote: > > > I'm trying to see a pdf-report, created dinamically with an > > XML-XSL process. But if I try to see it with an IE 5.0, I see just a > > blank page with an icon. If I try it with an IE 5.5, I can see it > > with no problem. > > > > Why is it? And there is a solution, because I cannot change the > > browser to 5.5? > > - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Problems with seeing pdf-files in IE 5.0
It has been reported many times that IE5.0 needs some strong mime type information : not only you must set the content-type HTTP header to "application/pdf" but you also have to use an url with ".pdf" at the end... Cyril Rognon At 14:05 07/12/2001 +0100, you wrote: I'm trying to see a pdf-report, created dinamically with an XML-XSL process. But if I try to see it with an IE 5.0, I see just a blank page with an icon. If I try it with an IE 5.5, I can see it with no problem. Why is it? And there is a solution, because I cannot change the browser to 5.5?