Thanks, Wouter

M$ IE javascripting engine is working differently from NS js engine.
That is, in NS, escape function returns uri encoded string by *%CF%DF* format,
but in IE, escape function returns by *%uABCD* unicode format, and this 
lead to decode error in apache web server.
Yes, to use java.net.URLDecorder.encode() is an only way to solve this problem.

Thanks again.
Martin

At 03:54 ¿ÀÈÄ 2001-03-16 +0100, you wrote:
>Hi,
>
>Don't rely in JavaScript.
>
>Use java.net.URLDecoder.encode(), and java.net.URLEncoder.decode() before
>you push the parameters to the browser.
>
>Wouter
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Martin Ko [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: 16 March 2001 14:52
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: escape() Problem...
>
>
>Hi, all.
>
>I wrote a jsp page which send request by QUERYSTRING with a parameter
>containing international characters, and which get the parameter.
>
>I'm working with apache as a web server and tomcat as a jsp engine.
>
>And, with Netscape browser, I encode the string by escape function
>(javascript) before sending it, and it works fine. However, in IE, it
>doesn't.
>
>When I use only tomcat as a web server without apache, I saw a strange
>thing.
>In this case, if I use escape function in NS, and if I don't use escape
>function in IE, then it goes well !!
>But with apache as a web server, this action does not solve the problem...
>So, I think I should set some configurations on apache web server, but I
>have no idea...
>
>Can anyone help me?
>
>My jsp page is:
>
><%@ page language="java" %>
>
><javascript:test()>Test
>
>----------
><%=request.getParameter("t1")%>
>
>Regards
>Martin

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