Ummmm... I think the Expires requires a date in GMT, not a number, BTW. And no, that doesn't help. Already tried it, but tried it again to make sure.
== Ross == -----Original Message----- From: A mailing list for discussion about Sun Microsystem's Java Servlet API Technology. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Vincent BUI Sent: Friday, January 18, 2002 1:17 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Page Expired warning going back to POSTed page Hello, I think that any contents sent on a POST is marked expired, so that the browsers have to send the parameters again (to be certain to have the last data). May be you could try to play with the header and change the expiration delay of the response. Something with the : response.setHeader("Expires", "number big enough"); Hope this helped... Vincent ===== Vincent BUI, [EMAIL PROTECTED] PS : la signature de propagande qui suit n'est pas de mon fait. ___________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? -- Une adresse @yahoo.fr gratuite et en fran�ais ! Yahoo! Courrier : http://courrier.yahoo.fr ___________________________________________________________________________ To unsubscribe, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] and include in the body of the message "signoff SERVLET-INTEREST". Archives: http://archives.java.sun.com/archives/servlet-interest.html Resources: http://java.sun.com/products/servlet/external-resources.html LISTSERV Help: http://www.lsoft.com/manuals/user/user.html ___________________________________________________________________________ To unsubscribe, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] and include in the body of the message "signoff SERVLET-INTEREST". Archives: http://archives.java.sun.com/archives/servlet-interest.html Resources: http://java.sun.com/products/servlet/external-resources.html LISTSERV Help: http://www.lsoft.com/manuals/user/user.html
