Hi Don,

Thanks. I just tested your solution with my code and it works quite well. So I
now have two potential solutions to my problem.

Regards,

- Paul

At 11:17 AM 8/7/2001 -0400, Don Coleman wrote: 

>
> The attachement in my last email was broken by our mail gateway (which also
> insists on translating all my outgoing mail to HTML)
>
> <HTML> 
> <HEAD> 
> <META HTTP-EQUIV=Refresh CONTENT="0;
> URL=<http://jde.sunsite.dk/>http://jde.sunsite.dk/";> 
> </HEAD> 
> </HTML> 
>
> -----Original Message----- 
> From: Paul Kinnucan [<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
> Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2001 11:09 AM 
> To: Nick Sieger; 'Javier Lopez'; [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Subject: RE: Browsing to an anchor 
>
> At 09:48 AM 8/7/2001 -0500, Nick Sieger wrote: 
> >The second case that you describe, Javier, may be more user-friendly than 
> >forcing the user to specify the path to IE.  It's more work for the JDE,
but 
> >less work for the user. 
> > 
> >That's a lousy hack by M$ that iexplore.exe parses and receives the anchor 
> >but start/explorer does not.  I thought the browser was supposed to be 
> >integrated into the OS.  Somebody notify the DOJ...:) 
>
> I agree. Furthermore, invoking IE directly causes a new instance of IE each 
> time. This s very bad. 
>
> So next question. How do I create an html file on the fly that will forward 
> the user automatically to the correct page? Actually, I know how to create 
> HTML files. What I mean is, what HTML code can I use in the temporary file 
> that will forward the browser to the correct page. 
>
> - Paul 



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