> From: Dick Hardt <Dick_Hardt@hip.com>
>
> At 11:55 PM 11/10/95 +0000, Tim Bunce wrote:
> >
> >URL's always use / (but then the /'s in URL's aren't really filepath
> separators).
> >
> FYI
>
> This is not so - \'s can and do show up in URLs
Sorry, I wasn't being clear enough. I should have said that most URL schemes
use /'s to denote a hierarchical structure. Thanks for spotting that.
> I think that /'s are better to be returned - the OS treats the same in it's
> calls anyway.
That's great.
Tim.
>
> At 11:55 PM 11/10/95 +0000, Tim Bunce wrote:
> >
> >URL's always use / (but then the /'s in URL's aren't really filepath
> separators).
> >
> FYI
>
> This is not so - \'s can and do show up in URLs
Sorry, I wasn't being clear enough. I should have said that most URL schemes
use /'s to denote a hierarchical structure. Thanks for spotting that.
> I think that /'s are better to be returned - the OS treats the same in it's
> calls anyway.
That's great.
Tim.