- From: John Franks <john@math.nwu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 17 May 1995 19:12:39 -0500 (CDT)
- To: connolly@beach.w3.org (Daniel W. Connolly)
- Cc: luotonen@netscape.com, www-talk@w3.org, http-wg@cuckoo.hpl.hp.com, uri@bunyip.com
According to Daniel W. Connolly: > > A nice, clear, complete proposal. As you say, this could be done as a > server-private mechanism, but there's no reason why everybody > shouldn't do it the same way. > > A couple nits: > > > * The first byte in file is byte number 1. > > Blech. I'd rather it were 0. No biggie. > Base 0 is fine for bytes but would be problematic for other ranges. E.g. http://host/book;chapterrange=3-5 would mean chapters 4 to 6 if base 0 is used. This would be just too confusing. We thought it better to be consistent and use the same base for everything. > > MULTIPLE URL PARAMETERS > > > > If at some point there will be multiple simultaneous URL parameters, > > they should be separated by the ampersand character (just like > > multiple values are encoded in the FORM request). > > The ampersand character has odd interactions with SGML entity > reference syntax in HTML. > > This URL: > > http://host/path;param1=val1¶m2=val2 > > has to be written: > > <a href="http://host/path;param1=val1&param2=val2">xxx</a> > <a href="http://host/path;param1=val1&param2=val2">xxx</a> > > in HTML. > > I suggest you separate parameters with ';' in stead: > > <a href="http://host/path;param1=val1;param2=val2">xxx</a> > > Save everybody a little grief. > This is a good point. John Franks
Received on Wednesday, 17 May 1995 20:14:33 UTC