This is a HTML entity encoding. In HTML, you can replace the ampersand
character by "&". You can do that for a lot of other characters. For
example ">" is the greather-than sign.
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Julian S." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <twsocket@elists.org>
Sent: Monday, June 20, 2005 7:31 PM
Subject: [twsocket] 2 questions concerning cookies
I found an interesting thing. (the case referes to the page where the link
was: http://blablabla.site.pl/?we=airstriker )
When I choose 'show page source' in IE I find the following url which the
link refers to:
?we=airstriker&kod=962463
But whenever I save a page on the drive and then edit this page I see that
the link refers to:
http://blablabla.site.pl/?we=airstriker&kod=361152
What is amp doing here? What is it for? And what is semi-colon doing here?
I think it's something with php but I searched google and found nothing
about it;]
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