Re: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-16 Thread Nick de Voil
URL fragments, used to reference named anchors, and query strings are not mutually exclusive in any respect. You can use either or both within a request. If you use both, the query string is processed by the application server, and the URL fragment is used by the browser to navigate to the

Re: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread Paul Giesenhagen
I am not sure what he is actually using it for, but the output would be RecordEdit.cfm# (one #) Paul Giesenhagen QuillDesign - Original Message - From: Peter Bagnato [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: CF-Talk [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Saturday, February 15, 2003 1:47 PM Subject: Basic HTML Question

Re: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread Dave Lyons
i would assume its a typo but they should basically cancel out since there is nothing in between. I'm a newbie so i dont know but could it possibly a nifty lil trick to not show the rest of the string in the browser? dave !--- doesnt know jack about cfm --- - Original Message - From:

RE: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread Peter Bagnato
That's what I thought, but I see it all over the place... I'm just trying to figure out if there is some reason for it that I'm not aware of... -Original Message- From: Paul Giesenhagen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Saturday, February 15, 2003 2:46 PM To: CF-Talk Subject: Re: Basic

Re: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread Paul Giesenhagen
Oops .. you are right ... ### would leave one ... nothing like wrong answers :) Paul Giesenhagen QuillDesign - Original Message - From: Dave Lyons [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: CF-Talk [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Saturday, February 15, 2003 1:53 PM Subject: Re: Basic HTML Question i would assume

RE: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread Peter Bagnato
Subject: Re: Basic HTML Question Importance: High Oops .. you are right ... ### would leave one ... nothing like wrong answers :) Paul Giesenhagen QuillDesign - Original Message - From: Dave Lyons [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: CF-Talk [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Saturday, February 15, 2003 1:53 PM

Re: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread E. Keith Dodd
I've used that, however, with a named anchor so go to certain spot on referenced page. Unless a reasonable explanation, looks like is prepared for any anchor--unless I'm missing something, which very possible on a Saturday. E. Keith Dodd Wings of Eagles Services www.wingserv.com - Original

RE: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread Dave Watts
Oops .. you are right ... ### would leave one ... nothing like wrong answers :) No, you were right. In a string marked for output (within a CFOUTPUT, for example), if you want to use a literal pound sign you can escape it by doubling it. If you placed three pound signs together within a

Re: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread Taco Fleur
It's an anchor, however its not a named anchor, so it links to the top of the page. - Original Message - From: E. Keith Dodd [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: CF-Talk [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Sunday, February 16, 2003 6:24 AM Subject: Re: Basic HTML Question I've used that, however, with a named

Re: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread S . Isaac Dealey
It could be that he uses anchors a lot and typing # at the end of a file name is habitual (though I've never met anyone who used them more often than query strings, being that they're almost mutually exclusive), or it could be the result of a poorly formed multi-file replace in CF Studio. I just

RE: Basic HTML Question

2003-02-15 Thread Dave Watts
It could be that he uses anchors a lot and typing # at the end of a file name is habitual (though I've never met anyone who used them more often than query strings, being that they're almost mutually exclusive), or it could be the result of a poorly formed multi-file replace in CF