Does it matter in this situation anyway as I thought in IE on a Mac when you hit browse the full path is not returned - just the filename and extension. Thus in this case the tokenizing would still give the desired result.
Can some mac people check when you hit browse and browse to the file whether or not the path is returned. Thanks in advance, JJ --- Robert Garcia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > No, even on OS 9, the file name from the browser > uses "/". > > Robert. > > On Saturday, September 7, 2002, at 09:37 AM, Ford > Pedersen wrote: > > >> If you have any mac clients, you must determine > the platform first. > >> Mac uses "/", where windows uses "\". > > > > Slight correction. Mac OS 9 and below use ":". > Unix/Linux family & Mac > > OS X use "/". And Windows of course uses "\". > > > > HTH, > > Ford > > > _______________________________________________________________________ > > > _ > > TO UNSUBSCRIBE: send a plain text/US ASCII email > to > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > with unsubscribe witango-talk in > the message body > > > > -- > > Robert Garcia > BigHead Technology > 2781 N Carlmont Pl > Simi Valley, CA 93065 > Phone 805.522.8577 > http://www.bighead.net/ > http://www.theradmac.com/ > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > ________________________________________________________________________ > TO UNSUBSCRIBE: send a plain text/US ASCII email to > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with unsubscribe witango-talk in the > message body __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Finance - Get real-time stock quotes http://finance.yahoo.com ________________________________________________________________________ TO UNSUBSCRIBE: send a plain text/US ASCII email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with unsubscribe witango-talk in the message body
