Acutally, I think Im ok, because, the dynamic links, adjust to where 
ever it lives in the file
system.
I defined a constant and use the constant in links, so no matter how you 
rearrange stuff, it would still work.
So if the only reason is piece of mind, then Im in peace with myself... :)

Thanks for your input.


Cal Evans wrote:

>It's not so much a no-no as it is bad form.  It makes it very difficult to
>re-arrange your site at a later date or move that page.
>
>For your own peace of mind and those who come behind you, absolute links in
>the form of href="/correct/path/to/the/file.php" should be used.  You can
>omit the http:// and the host name if you like.
>
>=C=
>
>*
>* Cal Evans
>* Journeyman Programmer
>* Techno-Mage
>* http://www.calevans.com
>*
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Gerard Samuel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2002 12:40 PM
>To: php-gen
>Subject: [PHP] HTTP1.1
>
>
>Kinda off topic, but it deals with a php script Im writing.
>Ive been using dynamic strings to create relative links like ->
><a href="../../somefile.php">somefile</a>
>
>I was wondering if this is a no no according to http 1.1 specs.
>ie absolute links ->
><a href="http://host/correct_path_to_file.php";>somefile</a>
>
>I briefly looked through through the specs, but it didn't say that
>links/urls shouldn't be formatted like the first example above...
>
>Any insight, would be grateful.
>Thanks
>
>--
>Gerard Samuel
>http://www.trini0.org:81/
>http://dev.trini0.org:81/
>
>
>
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>PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
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>
>
>
>  
>

-- 
Gerard Samuel
http://www.trini0.org:81/
http://dev.trini0.org:81/




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