i'm not going to try and convince anyone to structure their urls in a specific way, but I have stated my preference which I think offers more clarity and logic without cryptic format that is more complicated to decipher (as you cant just look at the link and know the filename).
all that aside, i will be implementing the more fail-safe http approach to mime detection to precede my current checks which are currently dependent on the RSS item enclosure mime type and the file extension.
thanks for sending my that reference library.
and thanks for sharing your opinion.
sull
On 3/17/06, Andreas Haugstrup <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Fri, 17 Mar 2006 14:35:35 +0100, Michael Sullivan
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> it's like this.... tell me if including the media file name, as i
> suggest,
> breaks anything. tell me if it makes a url worse. tell me that it
> makes no
> sense to include the file name. tell me something to convince me that
> this
> suggestion is illogical without telling me 'its not a problem so why fix
> it'.
You're coming at this from the wrong angle.
We have URLs and we have HTTP. Well-defined standards and they have been
in use for almost 10 years. You want to change the way the URL work, which
breaks backwards compatibility and *I* am supposed to give you more
reasons not to go ahead? No, you should give *me* a good reason why
redefining the meaning of the URL parts is a good idea. Why should we all
spend time implementing this change when the current system has the same
capabilities?
Why is this change needed?
How will it break old webpages?
How will differences between the filename part of the URL and the filename
given in the query string be handled?
The change you're proposing is not simple at all. I still don't know *why*
you want this change. Is it because you're having trouble determining mime
type? In that case use an HTTP library that follows the same standard as
everyone else have been using for the past 10 years - problem solved. No
need for the rest of the world to change. In my last mail I listed the 3
step process required to determine a mime type in today's web - it's not a
hard thing to do. Or do you have some other reason for proposing the
changes?
--
Andreas Haugstrup Pedersen
<URL: http://www.solitude.dk/ >
Commentary on media, communication, culture and technology.
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Sull
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