I agree with Chuck on this. The net/http is the quickest and easiest way to 
check for broken links. Be cautious about web pages that send nice 
message-type web pages instead of hard error code pages.

Dave

On Monday, April 23, 2012 3:14:58 PM UTC-7, Chuck van der Linden wrote:
>
> Or check this stackoverflow question from about a year ago on this very 
> subject.
>
>   http://stackoverflow.com/q/5629170/409820
>
> (do people these days just not understand how to use google?  that was the 
> very top response for me when I searched for 'watir link checker' )
>  <watir-crumudgeon-mode 
> I swear if I ever teach a class on watir at a community college or 
> something, I'm going to downgrade people who ask others to do their 
> searching for them, especially when I know the answers are easily findable 
> and have been discussed before />
>
> On Saturday, April 21, 2012 3:01:51 AM UTC-7, Željko Filipin wrote:
>>
>> On Sat, Apr 21, 2012 at 11:56 AM, Benny Darsono <drs.b...@gmail.com> 
>> wrote:
>> > I want to check all available link in a website example www.stts.edu
>> > and find broken link from there use watir?
>>
>> This could help:
>>
>>
>> http://www.layeredthoughts.com/automation/how-to-write-your-first-ruby-web-bot-in-watir-scraping-weather-com
>>
>> Željko
>> --
>> watir.com/book - author
>>  
>

-- 
Before posting, please read http://watir.com/support. In short: search before 
you ask, be nice.

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