part taken from URI class comment: "A hierarchical URI is either an absolute URI whose scheme-specific part begins with a slash character, or a relative URI, that is, a URI that does not specify a scheme. Some examples of hierarchical URIs are:
http://www.pharo-project.org/home file:///~/calendar A hierarchical URI is subject to further parsing according to the syntax [scheme:][//authority][path][?query][#fragment] where the characters :, /, ?, and # stand for themselves. The scheme-specific part of a hierarchical URI consists of the characters between the scheme and fragment parts. The authority part of a hierarchical URI is, if specified, either server-based or registry-based. A server-based authority parses according to the syntax [user-info@]host[:port] where the characters @ and : stand for themselves. Nearly all URI schemes currently in use are server-based. An authority part that does not parse in this way is considered to be registry-based. The path component of a hierarchical URI is itself said to be absolute if it begins with a slash character ('/'); otherwise it is relative. The path of a hierarchical URI that is either absolute or specifies an authority is always absolute." Le 4 mai 2011 à 21:20, laurent laffont a écrit : > Today: HierarchicalURI > > > Comment Of The Day Contest - One Day One Comment > Rules: > #1: Each day a not commented class is elected. Each day the best comment will > be integrated with name of the author(s). > #2: If you cannot comment it, deprecate it. > Results: http://code.google.com/p/pharo/wiki/CommentOfTheDayContest > > Laurent
