update - seems to only work if you have multiple page definitions in
same html file.
On Apr 2, 1:02 pm, ChrisM cjjmur...@gmail.com wrote:
i am using the examples from;
I have a incoming request at
http://localhost:8000/#/init/default/map_geoloc
in routes.py i have:
routes_in =
On Apr 3, 2011, at 4:58 AM, ChrisM wrote:
update - seems to only work if you have multiple page definitions in
same html file.
I'd avoid using # in a URL, because a browser is likely to parse it as a
fragment (anchor) identifier.
On Apr 2, 1:02 pm, ChrisM cjjmur...@gmail.com wrote:
i am
I was trying to get around the fact that jquery inserts the # into the
url, so the
correct html template is not loaded, this does not happen if you use
multi page
html file - oh yes, this is for a jquery mobile page.
On Apr 3, 3:54 pm, Jonathan Lundell jlund...@pobox.com wrote:
On Apr 3, 2011,
On Apr 3, 2011, at 4:01 PM, ChrisM wrote:
I was trying to get around the fact that jquery inserts the # into the
url, so the
correct html template is not loaded, this does not happen if you use
multi page
html file - oh yes, this is for a jquery mobile page.
The hash URL never gets to the
4 matches
Mail list logo