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Re: the browser doesn't know what an MHT file is -- what does?
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v=HTML2 The theory of relative paths. :D |
Re: the browser doesn't know what an MHT file is -- what does?
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MHT is the most widely accepted format for offline pages. I wouldn't object to MAFF if there was better support for it. Last time I checked, the firefox MAFF plugin went obsolete, and only worked with FF version 1.0. |
Re: the browser doesn't know what an MHT file is -- what does?
Well, it may be a problem with IE but its also a part of the standard:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MHTML http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2557 |
Re: the browser doesn't know what an MHT file is -- what does?
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This is why you can open an MHT file, and all the links actually work seamlessly if you're online -- precisely how you would expect a good implementation of an offline page to work. I've worked with other offline web archive formats that broke the option to click on unsaved links - perhaps due to lack of absolute URIs. There's no reason why having absolute URIs in a file should complicate the support. The fact that MS can't handle it is a statement of MS, not the standard. The standard has ensured that well designed implementations can easily browse online from an offline file, and rightly so. I wouldn't have it differently. Moreover, the standard actually allows for relative URIs (page 9 of RFC 2557), so that captured objects can have a relative reference. This makes it possible for the offline objects to be loaded, while the links deeper than the offline page goes can be used to retrieve online content. |
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