Well, yeah, I wrote that feature. ;-)

On 9/12/08, tim menzies <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Sep 12, 7:31 am, "Ben Collins-Sussman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Sounds like you just need to set the svn:mime-type property correctly
>> on your svn files, so that GET repsonses end up having proper
>> Content-type: headers on them.
>
> dear ben,
>
> wow: absolutely 100% spot-on comment!
>
> following your advice i did the following:
>
> svn propset svn:mime-type text/css print.css
> svn propset svn:mime-type text/css screen.css
> svn proplist --verbose *.css
>
> Properties on 'print.css':
>   svn:mime-type : text/css
> Properties on 'screen.css':
>   svn:mime-type : text/css
>
> i can now place the style sheets under version control and read them
> into the html using
>
> <head>
> <link
>     rel="stylesheet"
>     type="text/css"
>     media=screen
>     href="http://iccle.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/doc/site/screen.css";
>>
> <link
>     rel="stylesheet"
>     type="text/css"
>     media=print
>     href="http://iccle.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/doc/site/print.css";
>>
> </head>
>
> enjoy!
> :-)
>
> t
>
>>
>> On Fri, Sep 12, 2008 at 4:26 AM, tim menzies <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> wrote:
>>
>> > on another matter relating to serving files from google code:
>>
>> > i have  a web site that serves pages and image content direct from
>> > google code and there is a puzzlinh inconsistency in the way those
>> > pages are served.
>>
>> > accessing images direct from the repository works fine; e.g.
>> > <img src="http://iccle.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/share/img/
>> > bayesVsOthers.png">
>>
>> > also, i can slurp in page content using curl under php using similar
>> > style URLs (i.e. direct to iccle.googlecode.com/svn/trunk...)
>>
>> > but, i'm i try to serve my css style sheets from google code (e.g.
>> >http://iccle.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/doc/site/screen.css) then
>> > something goes wrong and the page renders as if it can't find the
>> > style sheet.
>>
>> > i can't tell is this an issue at the google end or if it is  a matter
>> > that i should raise with my ISP
>>
>> > comments anyone?
>>
>> > thanks!
>> > tim menzies
>>
>> > On Sep 11, 3:45 pm, xliteration <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> >> Thanks a lot, Doug. Also, I was reading somewhere that you can set the
>> >> mime-type of file to text/html. Is that for svn only or downloads
>> >> also?
>>
>> >> Also, I guess google code hosting does not have bandwidth quotas, only
>> >> disk quotas. right?
>>
>> >> Last, but not the least - how do I update a JS file after more than 50
>> >> downloads? I don't want to create versions in my downloads since a
>> >> bookmarklet will keep on referencing the old JS download.
>>
>> >> Many thanks,
>> >> ~ Xliterate
>>
>> >> On Sep 11, 1:18 pm, doug <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> >> > The reason the browser pops up that dialog is that the Downloads
>> >> > feature sets an HTTP header called "Content-Disposition" that tells
>> >> > the browser to treat the contents as an "attachment".  However,
>> >> > browsers don't do this for all static content: it applies to HTML,
>> >> > but
>> >> > not to <script src> or <img>.  This is why many projects serve
>> >> > their .js files using the Downloads feature.
>>
>> >> > You should serve your .html files from your Subversion repository
>> >> > (http://indic.googlecode.com/svn/).  Your indic project doesn't have
>> >> > any content checked in yet, so you'll need to use svn to add the
>> >> > content.  You can find instructions on how to do this
>> >> > athttp://code.google.com/p/indic/source/checkout
>>
>> >> > On Sep 9, 1:38 pm, xliteration <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> >> > > I don't want to use GModules hosting if I can use Google Code for
>> >> > > serving the js files. I am hoping somebody can clarify these
>> >> > > doubts.
>>
>> >> > > On Sep 8, 12:31 pm, xliteration <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> >> > > > Hi,
>>
>> >> > > > I recently started an open source project
>> >> > > > onhttp://code.google.com/p/indic/
>>
>> >> > > > One of the pieces of code is a bookmarklet which users can
>> >> > > > download to
>> >> > > > use transliteration on any web page. That means serving files out
>> >> > > > of
>> >> > > > the downloads section of the website. The JS files are being
>> >> > > > served ok
>> >> > > > but I want to know if Google Code is a reliable solution
>> >> > > > (bandwidth/
>> >> > > > latency wise) to serve files to users.
>>
>> >> > > > Secondly, I tried to create a bookmarklet which fetches HTML file
>> >> > > > from
>> >> > > > google code and it prompts to download HTML file instead of
>> >> > > > opening
>> >> > > > it. Maybe, that is intended by design (security concerns?). I was
>> >> > > > wondering if there is another way to do that.
>>
>> >> > > > Third, if I update a JS file, since users have reference to old
>> >> > > > JS
>> >> > > > file - what should I do to update the users? Google code
>> >> > > > disallows me
>> >> > > > to change the file contents of a file made available for
>> >> > > > download.
>>
>> >> > > > Thanks.
>> >> > > > ~ Xliterate
> >
>

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