On 2010-03-05 22:28, John Francis wrote:

That's because spaces in URLs are a sort of grey area.  You're not
supposed to use them (you should encode them as %20, or perhaps '+'),
but it is permissible to recognise and accept a space as part of a URL,
rather than treating it as a terminator.

Well, technically, they /must/ be encoded as %20 ... space isn't technically permissible in the standard. However, certain ... cough ... vendors have, uh, "extended" the standard over the years.

--
Thanks,
DougF (KG4LMZ)

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