Mike writes:
> Thanks for the response.
>
> Yeah, I don't understand why
> https://nationalmap.gov/epqs/pqs.php
> won't open in a browser, but
In fact, it does open in a browser and the result is "General failure:
Invalid Coordinates".
This URL runs the PHP script pqs.php, this script needs inp
The url ending pgs.php requires the query_string data to be looked up. The
url ending in “/“ is for the interactive page for a browser, say. You
shouldn’t have to specify “:443” (from your 500 error) instead just use
“https://“ prefix. In general http connections forward themselves to https;
if I g
Thank you. That helps me a lot to know that it works for you.
Your code, exactly as you sent it, still does not work for me.
It gives:
500 Can't connect to nationalmap.gov:443 (Bad address) at trash.pl line 19.
I'm going to try to assign an environment variable to my
system. I doubt that wil
Look at eval blocks - lets you trap fatal errors from other code and not
die/abort yourself.
https://perldoc.perl.org/functions/eval.html
You can also wrie your own signal handling code
https://www.perl.com/article/37/2013/8/18/Catch-and-Handle-Signals-in-Perl/
On Wed, Aug 28, 2019 at 8:42 AM Lar
I've been using the CPAN module XML::Feed to parse Atom and RSS feeds.
Some of the feeds it fetches are a little broken from time to time and
when that happens the parser produces and error and stops the program.
I'd like it to just keep going.
I am invoking the parser inside a subroutine like th
Thanks for the response.
Yeah, I don't understand why
https://nationalmap.gov/epqs/pqs.php
won't open in a browser, but
https://nationalmap.gov/epqs/
will. I imagine this may have something
to do with redirects, but who knows.
When I put
https://nationalmap.gov/epqs/pqs.php
into a web browse