Message-Id: <m0mlV92-00008eC@garnet.msen.com> To: www-talk@nxoc01.cern.ch Subject: saving documents, losing links Date: Sat, 31 Oct 92 21:34:14 EST From: Edward Vielmetti <emv@msen.com> it should, at least i think it should, be possible once you have come across a piece of the web that you're interested in to save it off to the side (in source form) so that you can look at it again or add it to your own hoard of stuff. i went to the 'jargon' section of the web, as served by iicm.tu-graz.ac.at, to look something up. (I wanted to see whether the hacker's dictionary had a definition for 'firmware', since there's a harangue going on about it in comp.infosystems. i located a nice entry on '-ware' which looked pretty interesting and went to save that to a file (using the command 'source > $HOME/archives/ware.html' from the line mode browser). to my slight surprise and dismay, when I went to visit the document again (using the command 'www ~/archives/ware.html') all of the cross reference links were just gone. looking around a little bit I think that a simple sed command like sed -e 's/HREF=A/HREF=http://iicm.tu-graz.ac.at:80\/A/g' or thereabouts would put things right. should making a copy of a piece of the web simply be a verbatim copy of the source, or should it try to make relative links absolute? Edward Vielmetti, vice president for research, Msen Inc. emv@Msen.com Msen Inc., 628 Brooks, Ann Arbor MI 48103 +1 313 998 GLOB