Hello Akebono,
On Fri, 11 Feb 2011 10:50:03 +0100 GMT (11/Feb/11, 16:50 PM +0700 GMT),
Akebono Translation Service wrote:
ATS It seems The Bat converts the combination of ym to µ in IE's web
ATS address bar if this combination is found within a link in an HTML
ATS e-mail (if the format is plain
Hello Thomas,
On Tuesday, February 15, 2011 you wrote:
TF Hello Akebono,
TF On Fri, 11 Feb 2011 10:50:03 +0100 GMT (11/Feb/11, 16:50 PM +0700 GMT),
TF Akebono Translation Service wrote:
ATS It seems The Bat converts the combination of ym to µ in IE's web
ATS address bar if this combination is
Is this a known bug? It seems pretty serious to me!
Best regards,
Loek van Kooten
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Dear all,
It seems The Bat converts the combination of ym to µ in IE's web
address bar if this combination is found within a link in an HTML
e-mail (if the format is plain text, this does not happen).
P.S. The mail is encoded in utf-8 and the source clearly says ym, not µ
Best regards,
Loek
On Friday, February 11, 2011, 10:56:56, Akebono Translation Service wrote:
P.S. The mail is encoded in utf-8 and the source clearly says ym, not µ
If the source says something like a
href=http://www.example.com/foo?bar=ym=baz;
that's illegal HTML, and the result is not surprising. All
Dear Jernej,
All
characters in HTML must be written as amp;.
That explains a lot and solved my issue. Thanks a lot!
Best regards,
Loek van Kooten
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- Original Message
From: Jernej Simončič jernej.listso...@ena.si
If the source says something like a
href=http://www.example.com/foo?bar=ym=baz;
that's illegal HTML, and the result is not surprising. All
characters in HTML must be written as amp;. If a bare appears in
source,
On Friday, February 11, 2011, 15:58:53, Sam Brown wrote:
That's accurate except in this case. The reason the character shouldn't be
used in HTML is because it's a key element in the parsing of URLs (the
character separates parameters in the URL). So in this case, where the
character is
Hello Jernej
On Friday, February 11, 2011, 4:55:16 PM, you wrote:
No, should always be escaped in HTML - URLs are no exception.
But Google search uses for example:
http://www.google.com/search?q=ampersandhl=ennum=10lr=lang_enft=icr=safe=imagestbs=lr%3Alang_1en
--
Jeff Gaines
On 2/11/11 12:42 PM, Jeff Gaines wrote:
Hello Jernej
On Friday, February 11, 2011, 4:55:16 PM, you wrote:
No, should always be escaped in HTML - URLs are no exception.
But Google search uses for example:
Hi
On Friday 11 February 2011 at 10:22:13 AM, in
mid:137386865.2011022...@eternallybored.org, Jernej Simoncic
wrote:
On Friday, February 11, 2011, 10:56:56, Akebono
Translation Service wrote:
P.S. The mail is encoded in utf-8 and the source
clearly says ym, not µ
If the source says
On Friday, February 11, 2011, 19:41:20, Jonathan Bayer wrote:
You aren't seeing the escapes behind the scene. While you may see that
in your browser, if you look at the source you will see amp instead of
the ampersand.
It really depends - some of Google's URLs use amp; and others use
just .
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