--- On Wed, 8/20/08, Paolo Niccolò Giubelli wrote:
>> Dave Newton wrote:
>>> I'm pretty sure it's Struts 1, since there are both [...]
> Yeah, it's struts1.
> So, should I use ? Does it perform an urlencoding?
Wouldn't it have been quicker to either (a) try it, or (b) search the fine web,
rather
Oleg Mikheev ha scritto:
Dave Newton wrote:
I'm pretty sure it's Struts 1, since there are both and
Yeah, it's struts1.
So, should I use ? Does it perform an urlencoding?
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Dave Newton wrote:
I'm pretty sure it's Struts 1, since there are both and tags.
The answer, however, is probably the easiest.
My bad :)
I always keep forgetting that two Struts' share one mail list
Oleg
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--- On Tue, 8/19/08, Oleg Mikheev wrote:
> Paolo Niccolò Giubelli wrote:
>>
>
> What is your Struts 2 version? I thought that at some point
> Struts 2 made it impossible to use JSTL expressions inside its
> tags... But anyway URLEncoding cannot be done in JSTL.
> You could use to assign your URL
Paolo Niccolò Giubelli wrote:
What is your Struts 2 version? I thought that at some point Struts 2
made it impossible to use JSTL expressions inside its tags...
But anyway URLEncoding cannot be done in JSTL.
You could use to assign your UR
This is my scenario: I'm url-rewriting my web application, so I'm
putting some strings into the html:link href attributes, so to make my
links more search-engine friendly.
Obviously, those strings are retrieved from the database.
An example follows:
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