Sorry Cerebrus,

I missed your post. Sorry for my mis-speak. I spend way to much time
programming and not enough time learning the normenclature.

I will look in to what you posted.

Thanks

~Gina_M~
(when do I get off of my posts being moderated so I can get quicker
responses)


On Jun 29, 10:34 pm, Cerebrus <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks for that useful link about SOAP !
>
> You used the term "soap page" which is not equivalent to saying "SOAP
> webservice". A webservice is not a page in common parlance .
>
> As to your answer, any .NET webservice allows GET and POST requests.
> If you browse to the asmx file and click any webmethod that uses
> parameters, you will find the supported protocols listed. It will also
> show you the sample request that must be sent as well as the
> parameters and content-type expected. For instance, HTTP Post would
> require a content-type of "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" (as
> usual). That is what you must replicate.
>
> You can use the HttpWebRequest class or (possibly, but I'm not sure)
> the WebClient class to send an HTTP POST request.
>
> On Jun 29, 11:16 pm, Gina_Marano <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I have a web service that uses the SOAP protocol and takes in an order
> > (XML) processes the order and returns the order id (request/response).
> > I want to be able to support the HTTP Post protocol.
>
> >http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SOAP
>
> > ~Gina_M~
>
> > On Jun 29, 10:35 am, Cerebrus <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > I think we need MUCH more detail... for instance, what is a "SOAP
> > > page" ?
>
> > > On Jun 29, 8:50 pm, Gina_Marano <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > I have a soap page. Is there a way to support HTTP Post (synchronous)
> > > > as well.
>
> > > > Other question... Difference between a web server that accepts HTTP
> > > > Post and a REST server?
>
> > > > I am all new to ASP.Net so please forgive me.
>
> > > > ~Gina_M~- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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