You're only supposed to change it in your HTML..NOT in the
    browser's query line..
    
    --Jani
    


-- 

On 22 Jul 2002, Walter A. Boring IV wrote:

>Howdy,
>  This may be a tad off topic, but it is related to how php deals with
>building the $_GET superglobal w/ query string vars.  
>
>According to the W3C HTML validator, it is illegal to build a query
>string for a url such as 
>
>foo.php?bar=1&myvar=2
>             ^^^^^^^^
>
>They say you HAVE to use
>foo.php?bar=1&myvar=2
>             ^^^^^^^^^^^^
>
>in php's case it builds 
>$_GET["bar"] = 1;
>$_GET["amp;myvar"] = 2;
>
>I don't know of ANYONE on the planet that builds query string vars in
>this way. Unless you do, your html pages will not validate through the
>W3C validator.
>
>The official W3c spec explanation is at
>http://www.htmlhelp.com/tools/validator/problems.html#amp
>
>
>I think changing this could potentially break many sites.  
>Does anyone know what other web languages do with &myvar=2 ?
>I think the W3C validator is broken/wrong in this respect, and wanted to
>know what other folks think about it.  
>
>
>Walt
>
>
>
>


-- 
PHP Development Mailing List <http://www.php.net/>
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to