--- On Wed, 8/20/08, Paolo Niccolò Giubelli wrote:
>> Dave Newton wrote:
>>> I'm pretty sure it's Struts 1, since there are both [...]
> Yeah, it's struts1.
> So, should I use ? Does it perform an urlencoding?
Wouldn't it have been quicker to either (a) try it, or (b) search the fine web,
rather
Oleg Mikheev ha scritto:
Dave Newton wrote:
I'm pretty sure it's Struts 1, since there are both and
Yeah, it's struts1.
So, should I use ? Does it perform an urlencoding?
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Dave Newton wrote:
I'm pretty sure it's Struts 1, since there are both and tags.
The answer, however, is probably the easiest.
My bad :)
I always keep forgetting that two Struts' share one mail list
Oleg
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--- On Tue, 8/19/08, Oleg Mikheev wrote:
> Paolo Niccolò Giubelli wrote:
>>
>
> What is your Struts 2 version? I thought that at some point
> Struts 2 made it impossible to use JSTL expressions inside its
> tags... But anyway URLEncoding cannot be done in JSTL.
> You could use to assign your URL
Paolo Niccolò Giubelli wrote:
What is your Struts 2 version? I thought that at some point Struts 2
made it impossible to use JSTL expressions inside its tags...
But anyway URLEncoding cannot be done in JSTL.
You could use to assign your UR
aehm... dont trust what you see in the system.out. What you see depends
on what encoding your console actually drives, and that would be
probably something different from what java does (typically iso-8589-1)
regards
leon
On Mon, 2005-06-13 at 11:44 -0400, Franck wrote:
> Hi,
>
> in my webapp,
Hi there,
Try to use the following before you write anything to response:
response.setContentType("text/html; charset=UTF-8");
Make sure you use this before any call - response.getWriter();
Cheers
Sujan
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From: Franck [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, June 13, 20
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