Hi Peter,

I think in theory it should be possible to send a PUT requests with the
body of the resource to the appropriate URL. I do not know how the
default servlet handles this now, but this might be easier to do than
doing some multipart tricks.

regards,

Lars

Btw. I am installing Bunkai right now.


On Wed, 2008-02-13 at 20:23 +0100, Peter Svensson wrote:
> But I think that I can get it going now, with the correctly named parameter.
> I did some digging and Dojo have a very nice content: {} parameter for
> setting 'form' data ina  apost on the fly, so I'll use that ^-^
> 
> I hope I have time tomorrow to finish a version that can be used for generic
> editing... for a given value of generic, of course..
> 
> Cheers,
> PS
> 
> On Feb 13, 2008 8:19 PM, Alexander Klimetschek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> > Ups, my last mail was nonsense regarding the XHR upload. You can't do
> > that without iframe or swf tricks. Thanks for correcting me!
> >
> > Alex
> >
> > Am 13.02.2008 um 17:26 schrieb Alexander Klimetschek:
> >
> > > Am 12.02.2008 um 21:51 schrieb Tobias Bocanegra:
> > >> i don't know dojo, but afaik in ajax you cannot send a file unless
> > >> you
> > >> loosen some browser security policies. a work around is to use a
> > >> hidden iframe that contains a form.
> > >
> > >
> > > You can send a form with an <input type="file"> via XHR, but you
> > > cannot set the filename via Javascript. The user must click the
> > > "browse" button and choose a file himself to avoid automatic
> > > uploading of critical files.
> > >
> > > Alex
> > >
> > > --
> > > Alexander Klimetschek
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> >
> > --
> > Alexander Klimetschek
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >

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