How you get to the page is irrelevant. I don't care if you redirect
there or type in the url or click a link.
On 7/19/05, Erik Myllymaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am using DTML only because I am using the excellent Calendar tag product.
>
> sometimes, the links on the calendar tag get affect
I am using DTML only because I am using the excellent Calendar tag product.
sometimes, the links on the calendar tag get affected by from variables so as a
hack i re-write the QUERY_STRING using:
request.RESPONSE.redirect(request['URL'] + '?mode-calendar=' +
request['mode-calendar'] + '&date-
On 7/19/05, Erik Myllymaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't get a traceback, i just get error and message back as empty strings;
> their initiallized value.
>
So you're not getting an error.
What is the initialized value? Is 'error' and 'message' set in REQUEST?
(that you can find out from d
I don't get a traceback, i just get error and message back as empty strings;
their initiallized value.
very strange.
Peter Bengtsson wrote:
On 7/19/05, Erik Myllymaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I use the following template often. When using a page template for my MAIN page,
I access the er
On 7/19/05, Erik Myllymaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I use the following template often. When using a page template for my MAIN
> page,
> I access the error and message vars with:
>
> Error message
> Reg. Message
>
> How would I access them when I use a dtml-method for my MAIN page?
> and d
I use the following template often. When using a page template for my MAIN page,
I access the error and message vars with:
Error message
Reg. Message
How would I access them when I use a dtml-method for my MAIN page?
and don't seem to work.
Python Script - index_html:
# Import a standard fu