Isn't there a file referer that can be sent although usually not? The term implies, to me, localness.
__Stef http://caunter.ca/contact.html On Fri, 10 Oct 2003, [ISO-8859-1] Fr�d�ric L. W. Meunier wrote: > On Thu, 9 Oct 2003, Thomas Dickey wrote: > > > On Thu, 9 Oct 2003, [ISO-8859-1] Fr�d�ric L. W. Meunier wrote: > > > > > Alert!: Unable to connect to FTP host. > > > > > > FTP host ? > > > > With "file://foo/", that's the top-level directory on host "foo". > > With "file:///foo/", that's a top-level directory named "foo". > > > > In the first case lynx tried connecting to "foo" to get a directory > > listing, which means it's using ftp protocol. > > OK. I just never thought file:// and ftp:// would do the same > thing. > > ELinks and Links2: file:// -> pwd of the shell, but > file://home/ -> "No such file or directory". > > Mozilla: file:// -> file:/// , but file://foo -> file:/// > > Opera: file:// -> file:/// , and file://home -> file://home > (/home). > > I don't know what's the "right thing". > > -- > How to contact me - http://www.pervalidus.net/contact.html > > ; To UNSUBSCRIBE: Send "unsubscribe lynx-dev" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > ; To UNSUBSCRIBE: Send "unsubscribe lynx-dev" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
