Hi Jonathan,

Thanks for your quick response. Yes the application is 'app'.

Sure, that would be great.

Cheers,
Matt


On Jan 17, 2:19 pm, Jonathan Lundell <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks for the report, Matt.
>
> On Jan 16, 2011, at 5:11 PM, Matt wrote:
>
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> > Hi Jonathan,
>
> > I'm also trying to use the new routing approach and I'm having a
> > little trouble with static files.
>
> > In my app's static directory I have sub folders (containing files)
> > like this:
>
> >  /static/css/base.css
> >  /static/images/logo.png
> >  /static/js/jquery.js
>
> > I'm using the most minimal routing:
>
> > routers = dict(
> >    BASE = dict(
> >        default_application = 'app',
> >    ),
> > )
>
> > routes_onerror = [(r'*/*', r'/error')]
>
> > Now when I try and request certain files I seem to get very unexpected
> > results....
>
> > When I try:
>
> >http://localhost:8000/css/base.css
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> > it works.
>
> OK, I wouldn't expect that to work.
>
> Your app name is 'app', right?
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> > however when I request an invalid link like:
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> >http://localhost:8000/css/base2.css
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> > It doesn't raise a 404 as I'd expect.
>
> > Also for some reason I can't seem to use:
>
> >http://localhost:8000/static/css/base.css(gives a 403 error and
> > doesn't redirect to error).
>
> > But I have to use 'static' for javascript files:
>
> >http://localhost:8000/static/js/jquery.js
>
> > As
>
> >http://localhost:8000/js/jquery.js gives an error and redirects to :
>
> >http://localhost:8000/error?code=400&ticket=None&requested_uri=/js/jq...
>
> > Any suggestions?
>
> I'll investigate, using your parameters. Can't promise to get to it tonight, 
> though.

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