That would be great! I will be patiently watching the CVS... Thanks,
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, March 14, 2000 11:57 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Win32TransService and IE4.0 Hmmm... This was why I was worried about incorporating this stuff because I didn't understand fully what the issues were with different Win32 systems. We can certainly make it gracefully handle an empty or non-present registry entry for the MIME stuff, in which case it will fall back to not supporting anything but LCP and intrinsic encodings. I'll do that today as a first step. That will make it able to use what's there but not freak out if its not there. ---------------------------------------- Dean Roddey Software Weenie IBM Center for Java Technology - Silicon Valley [EMAIL PROTECTED] Jeff Lewis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 03/13/2000 11:13:16 AM Please respond to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc: Subject: Win32TransService and IE4.0 We just tried to move a production application from one of our development machines to a server. When doing so, we bumped into a little problem with the Win32TransService. It seems that it looks into: \\HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\MIME\Database\Charset Which is perfectly happy and full of all sorts of useful information on a machine with IE 5.0 installed, but the problem appears when trying to use Xerces with this transcoder on a machine that one has IE 4.0 installed. This branch of the registry is empty which causes a panic exception to be thrown... Any ideas as to how I might fix this? (Installing IE 5.0 is probably what we will do for know, but I really don't what to force our customers to download IE 5.0 for 3 hours when our application only takes 5 minutes to download...) Thanks,
