- From: Walter Ian Kaye <boo@best.com>
- Date: Wed, 20 Dec 1995 20:40:56 -0800
- To: www-html@w3.org, http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com
At 8:36p 12/20/95, BearHeart/Bill Weinman wrote: > Yes, "/../" is a unixism, but the path part of a URL is inherently >platform specific. I see URLs with "\" in them for DOS-type hosts, and >"\..\" is just as much of a problem--maybe more because of the lack >of permissions-bits in most DOSish OSs. The code I've seen that 403s >these things checks for the ".." and that seems to be a pretty >universal string for "go up a level in the file system", or do you >know of an OS with more than 3 servers on the net that doesn't work >that way? While Unix uses ../ and DOS uses ..\ and MacOS uses :: natively to "go up a level in the file system", it is quite clear (at least to me) that native notations have no place in a valid URL. As was quoted in another message, only ../ is valid for denoting hierarchy in a URL. I wish browsers were stricter about this... ::sigh:: -Walter __________________________________________________________________________ Walter Ian Kaye <boo@best.com> | Excel | FoxPro | AppleScript | Mountain View, CA |--------- programmer ---------| http://www.natural-innovations.com/ | Macintosh | Windows |
Received on Wednesday, 20 December 1995 20:43:56 UTC