Julian Reschke wrote:
(nit, and reminder to the editors:) HTTP doesn't use IRIs, it uses URIs. The location header will always contain a URI, not an IRI (unless the IRI happens to be a URI :-).
Heh... yes, you're right. Sorry about that. - James
Julian Reschke wrote:
(nit, and reminder to the editors:) HTTP doesn't use IRIs, it uses URIs. The location header will always contain a URI, not an IRI (unless the IRI happens to be a URI :-).
Heh... yes, you're right. Sorry about that. - James