Dieter Maurer wrote:
>
> Steve Alexander writes:
> >
> > When I look at the DTML Document through the web, the "self" object
> > passed to the breadcrumbs external method is the folder that contains
> > the DTML Document.
> > (I thought that should only be the case for DTML Methods!)
>
Steve Alexander writes:
>
> When I look at the DTML Document through the web, the "self" object
> passed to the breadcrumbs external method is the folder that contains
> the DTML Document.
> (I thought that should only be the case for DTML Methods!)
I expect, it is the folder containing
Evan Simpson wrote:
>
> From: "Steve Alexander" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > obj = self.restrictedTraverse(REQUEST.PATH_TRANSLATED)
> >
> > This stopped working when I tried the software on Windows.
> >
> > Bug or feature?
>
> I'm not sure, but I'm *very* curious what you're trying to accomplish wi
From: "Steve Alexander" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> obj = self.restrictedTraverse(REQUEST.PATH_TRANSLATED)
>
> This stopped working when I tried the software on Windows.
>
> Bug or feature?
I'm not sure, but I'm *very* curious what you're trying to accomplish with
this code. A better equivalent woul
I just tried out on Windows 98 a Zope application that was developed on
Linux.
Everything worked fine, except that REQUEST.PATH_TRANSLATED changed to
be delimited by backslashes on Windows 98, whereas it is delimited by
slashes on Linux.
This caught me out, as I'd been using it raw in an externa