On Feb 18, 2005, at 11:06 PM, Mauro Tortonesi wrote:
On Friday 18 February 2005 09:01 pm, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
Donny Viszneki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
But as I noted, the source code does NOT appear to escape the tilde
under any conditions.
Take a look at urlchr_table at url.c. ~ is marked as a
On Friday 18 February 2005 09:01 pm, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
> Donny Viszneki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > But as I noted, the source code does NOT appear to escape the tilde
> > under any conditions.
>
> Take a look at urlchr_table at url.c. ~ is marked as an unsafe
> character, which is why it g
On Feb 18, 2005, at 10:01 PM, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
Donny Viszneki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
But as I noted, the source code does NOT appear to escape the tilde
under any conditions.
Take a look at urlchr_table at url.c. ~ is marked as an unsafe
character, which is why it gets escaped.
You know,
Donny Viszneki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> But as I noted, the source code does NOT appear to escape the tilde
> under any conditions.
Take a look at urlchr_table at url.c. ~ is marked as an unsafe
character, which is why it gets escaped.
On Feb 18, 2005, at 9:34 PM, Mauro Tortonesi wrote:
On Saturday 12 February 2005 06:38 am, Donny Viszneki wrote:
I read the source code used for escaping filenames before saving them
to the disk in url.c, and it doesn't seem that it will escape the
tilde
ever. This however isn't the problem I'm ex
On Saturday 12 February 2005 06:38 am, Donny Viszneki wrote:
> Using GNU Wget 1.9.1...
>
> I read the source code used for escaping filenames before saving them
> to the disk in url.c, and it doesn't seem that it will escape the tilde
> ever. This however isn't the problem I'm experiencing. The pro
Using GNU Wget 1.9.1...
I read the source code used for escaping filenames before saving them
to the disk in url.c, and it doesn't seem that it will escape the tilde
ever. This however isn't the problem I'm experiencing. The problem is
that HTTP standards allow for a tilde in a URL, and wget esc