Gerald et al:
In our use of embperl on the www.research.att.com web site, we've come across
a number of pains with respect to embperl and people who have pages that don't
want embperl. Inertia causes these people to not want to have to do a thing to
their work (like changing file extensions to something that doesn't go through
embperl or double bracketing), and I find that completely understandable but
unfortunate.
People have made two requests which I think might be useful to put into
Embperl. Please let me know if you agree or disagree.
1) With documents that contain no embperl code, the last-modified header is
included to be the actual last-modified date of the file.
2) Put in a special embperl command that basically means "stop looking for
embperl from here down in this document".
Regards,
Christian
-----------------
Christian Gilmore
Senior Technical Staff Member
AT&T Labs IP Technology, Florham Park
cgilmore@research.att.com
http://www.research.att.com/info/cgilmore
In our use of embperl on the www.research.att.com web site, we've come across
a number of pains with respect to embperl and people who have pages that don't
want embperl. Inertia causes these people to not want to have to do a thing to
their work (like changing file extensions to something that doesn't go through
embperl or double bracketing), and I find that completely understandable but
unfortunate.
People have made two requests which I think might be useful to put into
Embperl. Please let me know if you agree or disagree.
1) With documents that contain no embperl code, the last-modified header is
included to be the actual last-modified date of the file.
2) Put in a special embperl command that basically means "stop looking for
embperl from here down in this document".
Regards,
Christian
-----------------
Christian Gilmore
Senior Technical Staff Member
AT&T Labs IP Technology, Florham Park
cgilmore@research.att.com
http://www.research.att.com/info/cgilmore