Thursday, July 27, 2000, 10:41:08 PM, you wrote:
C> On Thu, 27 Jul 2000 22:06:48 -0500, Joe Finocchiaro wrote:
C> <snip>
JF>> To set the following quote as a single cookie, for example, where do
JF>> I put the \n(s) in the following quote:
C> I think that what you're not realising is that each line in the
C> cookie file denotes a new and separate cookie; even a blank line.
Believe it or not, I really did understand *that* part.
C> Do NOT
C> hit the return key when entering the long cookie. Enter it as a single,
C> long line of text.
But I didn't have a clue about *this* part!
I just pasted it in there from a file I have on hand, and it was
already "wrapped."
C> The '\n' tells TB! to place a carriage return for you
C> when it generates the cookie in the template.
This "feature" also explains something else that has been happening to
me, and which now will prevent me from asking yet another really stupid
question.
Like this one:
Why, when I paste a copied file into the message window does it not
wrap the lines immediately and automatically, but when the message is
submitted or broadcast, it does so perfectly?
;>)
C> You cookie file should therefore have no blank lines and each
C> new line in the cookie file denotes the start of a new cookie.
In theory, I suppose, there is then probably no limit to how long a line can be?
--
Joe Finocchiaro
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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