http://www.festra.com/eng/snip12.htm
Simple googling gives a lot of results, try: html strip (pascal OR delphi)
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On 4/17/2011 11:00 AM, leledumbo wrote:
> http://www.festra.com/eng/snip12.htm
> Simple googling gives a lot of results, try: html strip (pascal OR delphi)
Thank you for your reply.
I feel I have to justify myself: I always do extensive web and list
archive searches before posting to a list (henc
HTML is not meant to be handled on a line-by-line basis as other
text-based formats. According to the specs, HTML is not line-based.
Browsers should display the following two HTML snippets identically:
one#13#10two
and
one#13#10two
With HTML tags removed both result to:
one two
As such,
Thanks a lot for your reply.
On 4/17/2011 3:46 PM, Ralf Junker wrote:
> HTML is not meant to be handled on a line-by-line basis as other
> text-based formats. According to the specs, HTML is not line-based.
> Browsers should display the following two HTML snippets identically:
[...]
> As such, a
2011/4/17 Roland Schäfer :
> Yes, that looks perfect. I wouldn't even have a problem with the license
> or with paying for it, and I even still have D7. However, my program has
> to run on our Debian 64-bit servers.
You could contact the authors and say that you would like to buy a
license if it w
On 17.04.2011 16:30, Felipe Monteiro de Carvalho wrote:
>> Yes, that looks perfect. I wouldn't even have a problem with the license
>> or with paying for it, and I even still have D7. However, my program has
>> to run on our Debian 64-bit servers.
>
> You could contact the authors and say that you