At 13:28 28/07/2000 +0200, Michael Hanisch wrote: >To be honest, I have always used plain ampersands in URLs embedded in my >pages, and thus far I have never encountered any problems. >But maybe I've just been lucky... ;-) Forget about all those mindboggling HTML questions ! Use XHTML, there & is mandatory so you are much safer (though it was indeed safer with plain HTML as it will avoid the problem you mention). -- robin b. All paid jobs absorb and degrade the mind. -- Aristotle
- Re: [OT] & in URLs (was: Re: Templating System) Michael Hanisch
- RE: [OT] & in URLs (was: Re: Templating Syste... Gerald Richter
- Re: [OT] & in URLs (was: Re: Templating Syste... Gisle Aas
- Re: [OT] & in URLs (was: Re: Templating Syste... Robin Berjon
- Re: [OT] & in URLs (was: Re: Templating Syste... brian d foy
- Re: [OT] & in URLs (was: Re: Templating S... brian d foy