Ian Hickson wrote:
On Mon, 21 Jul 2008, Julian Reschke wrote:
Ian Hickson wrote:
...
...which basically just says it's a valid URL if it's a valid URI or IRI
(with some caveats in the case of IRIs to prevent legacy encoding behaviour
from handling valid URLs in a way that contradicts the IRI spec). This
doesn't allow spaces.
...
Correct. But it does allow non-ASCII characters. How do you put them into an HTTP header value?

Presumably HTTP defines how to handle non-ASCII characters in HTTP as part of its error handling rules, no?

Non-ASCII characters in header values are by definition ISO-8859-1. Yes, that sucks. It's not sufficient to encode all IRIs, thus you need to map IRIs to something you can use.

And no, that has nothing to do with error handling.

BR, Julian






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