On Monday 2007-12-10 06:34 +0100, Henrik Nordstrom wrote: > But browser vendors do not dare implementing it due to there being a > handful number of noticeably broken servers out there sending It's not just broken servers. With the list of Mozilla's Content-Location bugs: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/showdependencytree.cgi?id=238654&maxdepth=1&hide_resolved=0 I found one bug that's not about a broken server: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=241981 It's about Apache serving a content-negotiated document at a URL of the form http://example.com/doc . For browsers supporting XHTML, it serves doc.xhtml; for other browsers, it serves an equivalent doc.html. The document contains links to anchors within itself (e.g., <a href="#intro">Introduction</a>); links in the document are relative to Content-Location. Thus, clicking one of those links takes the browser to http://example.com/doc.xhtml#intro, which is not a URL intended to be linked to or exchanged. -David -- L. David Baron http://dbaron.org/ Mozilla Corporation http://www.mozilla.com/Received on Monday, 10 December 2007 08:41:50 GMT
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