waffleninja Suspended 11394 Posts user info edit post |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BlackBerry http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackberry
this surprised me 4/22/2007 9:28:56 PM |
Specter All American 6575 Posts user info edit post |
the internet is an amazing place. who would've thought capital letters and lowercase letters were the same characters 4/22/2007 9:40:35 PM |
agentlion All American 13936 Posts user info edit post |
1) wikipedia is not "the internet". Wikipedia has all sorts of redirects available for it, and capitlization might or might not be important. In that case, it is. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ipod http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ipod
2) on normal webpages, anything after the .com/, .net/, .edu/ etc is case sensitive. anything before that is not. e.g. ThEWOLFweb.com and thewolfweB.com both go to the same place. But anything after .com is generally an actual name of a file or folder on the webserver, so yes, it is case sensitive 4/22/2007 9:49:55 PM |
quagmire02 All American 44225 Posts user info edit post |
^ only if on a linux box, though, right? 4/22/2007 9:52:45 PM |
ScHpEnXeL Suspended 32613 Posts user info edit post |
I had always been told that ^ 4/22/2007 10:20:32 PM |
moron All American 34144 Posts user info edit post |
^,^^ The way a webserver responds to stuff after the / is purely a software trick. It doesn't even have to refer to an actual folder (although by default webservers respond this way). On Wiki for example, the /blackberry is not so much a directory as it is a command input. Like the message_topic.aspx? on TWW or the search? in a google query. 4/22/2007 10:24:00 PM |
agentlion All American 13936 Posts user info edit post |
yeah, but message_topic.aspx is the name of a file and it is case sensitive. what comes after the ? of course, depends on how the query is handled 4/22/2007 10:26:19 PM |
moron All American 34144 Posts user info edit post |
^ that's true, but it could easily be programmed to be case sensitive if the web server software author so felt it should be.
[Edited on April 22, 2007 at 10:34 PM. Reason : basically, it's not neccesarily dependent on the OS or file system.] 4/22/2007 10:34:21 PM |
hooksaw All American 16500 Posts user info edit post |
The World Wide Web is not the Internet either. Unbelievably, many do not know this simple fact. 4/23/2007 6:29:13 AM |
Raige All American 4386 Posts user info edit post |
Unix/Linux webservers are case sensitive by default
Windows servers are not due to the fact that they dont let you name 2 folders "Folder" and "folder".
So while the internet is technically case sensitive, most webservers are not. (This is not me saying that most web servers are windows, but typically the webserver doesn't care if there are caps in the titles). 4/23/2007 6:37:03 AM |
evan All American 27701 Posts user info edit post |
^wrong. most webservers = apache, and apache is case sensitive. at least, every installation i've ever seen has been.
and the GET vars (the ?topic=393405 and so on) are just that.. variables.. they are left up to the software interpreter.
apache can also be set up to parse the URL (the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BlackBerry) to get variables out of it. the /wiki/BlackBerry does not refer to an actual location on the server, but it tells PHP or whatever they're using to go to a database and fetch the content. 4/23/2007 7:51:00 AM |