When writing HTML, the trick I normally use to ensure that images etc are definitely the latest version, and not the cached version, is the following:
<META http-equiv="Cache-Control" content="no-cache, must-revalidate"> <META http-equiv="Pragma: no-cache"> I want to do the same thing in a page generated by perl/cgi, i.e something like: print $q->header, $q->start_html(-title=>'My new page', -meta=>{'http-equiv'=>'Cache-Control' 'content'='no-cache,must-revalidate'}) -meta=>{'http-equiv'=>'Pragma: no-cache'}); but this gives String found where operator expected at test.pl line 20, near "'Cache-Control' 'content'" How does one get perl produce the equivalent of the META tags above? Nick _________________________________________________________________ Nick Malden, Manchester Gruppe, DESY, Notkestrasse 85, 22607 Hamburg. ---------------------------------------------------------------- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]