==========[ HTML PROBLEM WITH FOLDER NAMES CONTAINING A HASH MARK? ]==========
I have a straightforward HTML file on my laptop's hard drive, which loads a couple of hundred .gif images into a table.
Each of those .gif files is in its own folder.
Out of the 210 images, all but three were loading. Those three were resulting in a little red 'X', as though they were not found.
I double and triple-checked the spelling of the file names and paths in the HTML file for those three images against the file and folder names on my hard drive, and they all checked out as correct.
Then I noticed that the folder names for all three of the images contained a hash mark (or a pound sign. The "#" character.)
I renamed the folders, replacing "#" with "No.", then updated the folder names the same way in the HTML file, and hit "refresh" - All three of the images now loaded correctly.
The browser I was using is IE7. I am running Windows 7 on the laptop, and was loading the HTML file by double-clicking on it within Windows Explorer (I have the .htm file extension associated with IE).
Is this a bug in IE (I didn't try Firefox)? A bug in whatever is serving the .htm to IE?
Or is it a "feature"? :)
I have a straightforward HTML file on my laptop's hard drive, which loads a couple of hundred .gif images into a table.
Each of those .gif files is in its own folder.
Out of the 210 images, all but three were loading. Those three were resulting in a little red 'X', as though they were not found.
I double and triple-checked the spelling of the file names and paths in the HTML file for those three images against the file and folder names on my hard drive, and they all checked out as correct.
Then I noticed that the folder names for all three of the images contained a hash mark (or a pound sign. The "#" character.)
I renamed the folders, replacing "#" with "No.", then updated the folder names the same way in the HTML file, and hit "refresh" - All three of the images now loaded correctly.
The browser I was using is IE7. I am running Windows 7 on the laptop, and was loading the HTML file by double-clicking on it within Windows Explorer (I have the .htm file extension associated with IE).
Is this a bug in IE (I didn't try Firefox)? A bug in whatever is serving the .htm to IE?
Or is it a "feature"? :)
via JREF Forum http://forums.randi.org/showthread.php?t=265095&goto=newpost
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