Thank you everybody, now is working...
Japhy, may i call u that way?, in this part...
# inicia variables.
> >$to = "info\@domain.mx";
> >$from = "info\@domain.mx";
> >$subject = "Comentarios Sitio Web";
> >
> ># manda el mail.
> >open (MAIL,"|mail $to");
> >print MAIL <<"END_top";
> >
> >"To: $to
> >Reply-To: $to:
> >Subject: $subject"
> >
> >END_top
>
> That's not working, I can promise you that.
....the mail is being received.
With CGI.pm can I do this a lot easier???
How could I use de CGI.pm, there is a tutorial or something I can read about
it???
I don't understand how to use de CPAN. Can you give me any pointers???
Thanks everybody...
Lalo.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jeff 'japhy' Pinyan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Eduardo Cancino" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, January 24, 2002 10:39 PM
Subject: Re: What's wrong with this?
> On Jan 24, Eduardo Cancino said:
>
> >The next script runs looks pefectly in IE but in Netscape it shows the
> >source of the html...
>
> That is because IE does things that a browser should not do.
>
> ># recibe la forma.
> >read(STDIN, $buffer, $ENV{'CONTENT_LENGTH'});
> >@pairs = split(/&/, $buffer);
>
> Ugh. You should not try to deal with incoming form information yourself
> -- use the standard CGI.pm module. Please.
>
> ># inicia variables.
> >$to = "info\@domain.mx";
> >$from = "info\@domain.mx";
> >$subject = "Comentarios Sitio Web";
> >
> ># manda el mail.
> >open (MAIL,"|mail $to");
> >print MAIL <<"END_top";
> >
> >"To: $to
> >Reply-To: $to:
> >Subject: $subject"
> >
> >END_top
>
> That's not working, I can promise you that.
>
> print MAIL << "END_top";
> To: $to
> Reply-To: $to
> Subject: $subject
>
> END_top
>
> Notice I didn't quote the surrounding text.
>
> >foreach $pair (@pairs)
> >{
> > ($name, $value) = split(/=/, $pair);
> > $value =~ tr/+/ /;
> > $value =~ s/%([a-fA-F0-9][a-fA-F0-9])/pack("C", hex($1))/eg;
> > $form{$name} = $value;
> >
> > if ($form{$name} ne "" && $form{$name} ne "no" && $name ne 'enviar') {
> > print MAIL $name . " = ". $form{$name} . "\n";
> > }
> >}
>
> This is bad too. Use CGI.pm. Please.
>
> >
> >close MAIL;
> >
> ># imprime html.
> >print <<WEB_page;
> >
> >Content-type: text/html
> ><!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 3.2 final//en">
>
> Here's the primary problem. You cannot place a newline before the HTTP
> headers, and you MUST place an extra newline AFTER the HTTP headers.
>
> print << "WEB_page";
> Content-type: text/html
>
> <!doctype ...>
> ...
> WEB_page
>
> Notice the difference?
>
> --
> Jeff "japhy" Pinyan [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.pobox.com/~japhy/
> RPI Acacia brother #734 http://www.perlmonks.org/ http://www.cpan.org/
> ** Look for "Regular Expressions in Perl" published by Manning, in 2002 **
> <stu> what does y/// stand for? <tenderpuss> why, yansliterate of course.
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]