I agree. Please check trunk again. On Aug 8, 2012, at 2:04 PM, Anthony wrote:
> On Wednesday, August 8, 2012 1:18:11 PM UTC-4, Massimo Di Pierro wrote: > ok, I defaulted to type='http' as you did but I allowed a type='auto' as well. > > Good idea. Actually, I'm not sure we need the separate "auto" option -- > type='client' only makes sense for Ajax requests anyway, so why not just make > "client" behave like "auto" (i.e., when type == "client", ignore the type > unless it's an Ajax request): > > from gluon import current > if type == 'client' and current.request.ajax: > raise HTTP(200, **{'web2py-redirect-location': location}) > > Also, I'm re-thinking whether we should go with a "type" argument that can > take multiple values or a simple boolean (e.g., client_side=True). I was > originally thinking "type" could be extended to take an "internal" value, but > perhaps client-side and internal should be considered to be independent > rather than mutually exclusive (i.e., you might want a redirect to be both > internal, and client-side -- after the internal redirect to generate the > response, the redirect itself should still happen on the client in the full > window). In that case, we'd need a separate argument to specify "internal" > independently (i.e., internal=True, client_side=True), so the client-side > specification might as well just be a boolean. Thoughts? > > Anthony > --