Page (HttpRequest property): Difference between revisions
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<td>A previously defined and instantiated <var>HttpRequest</var> object.</td></tr> | <td>A previously defined and instantiated <var>HttpRequest</var> object.</td></tr> | ||
<tr><th>newString</th> | <tr><th>newString</th> | ||
<td>A string expression identifying the page to fetch. It does not include a host name. If left unset, it defaults to the slash character (/), the root page for the host website. | <td>A string expression identifying the page to fetch. It does not include a host name. If left unset, it defaults to the slash character (/), the root page for the host website. The maximum length of the string is 1030. | ||
</td></tr> | </td></tr> | ||
</table> | </table> |
Revision as of 21:11, 6 March 2012
Relative page path (HttpRequest class)
The Page settable property identifies a page path that is relative to the site root. Such a page, or document, is what follows the host and any port number in a URL. You set the page for an HTTP request by assigning a value to Page, and you fetch its value by referencing it without any parameters.
Syntax
%currentString = httpRequest:Page httpRequest:Page = newString
Syntax terms
%currentString | A string or Longstring variable for the assignment of the current value of Page. |
---|---|
httpRequest | A previously defined and instantiated HttpRequest object. |
newString | A string expression identifying the page to fetch. It does not include a host name. If left unset, it defaults to the slash character (/), the root page for the host website. The maximum length of the string is 1030. |
Example
To set the page /links.html
as in:
http://foo.com:123/links.html
You would use:
%httpreq:Page = '/links.html'