On Fri, 27 Sep 1996 [log in to unmask] wrote:
> You are both right, because of <meta http-equiv=xxx>.
Actually I checked that and it makes no difference:
] weeble: telnet www.roads.lut.ac.uk 80
] Trying 158.125.96.47 ...
] Connected to weeble.lut.ac.uk.
] Escape character is '^]'.
] HEAD /People/jon.html HTTP/1.0
]
] HTTP/1.0 200 Document follows
] Date: Fri, 27 Sep 1996 19:19:20 GMT
] Server: NCSA/1.4
] Content-type: text/html
] Last-modified: Wed, 25 Sep 1996 19:59:28 GMT
] Content-length: 11074
]
] Connection closed by foreign host.
That document has an HTTP-EQUIV attribute in a META element (amongst other
things). Same goes for Apache/1.1.1, although that server does have the
ability to pump out the contents of a meta file (a la the CERN server) as
HTTP response headers if required.
Tatty bye,
Jim'll
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Jon "Jim'll" Knight, Researcher, Sysop and General Dogsbody, Dept. Computer
Studies, Loughborough University of Technology, Leics., ENGLAND. LE11 3TU.
* I've found I now dream in Perl. More worryingly, I enjoy those dreams. *
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