Alex> http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/interact/forms.html#h-17.3 Martin> The same document (at #submit-format) also explains that Martin> application/x-www-form-urlencoded only supports ASCII, so S= kip Martin> shouldn't be too surprised that his form fails for non-ASCI= I Martin> text. Are you misinterpreting what part has to be ASCII? If I submit a form containing the word lei=DF it appears that the last letter is not encoded as ß before being urlencoded. Instead, the bytes that represent that character in the de= sired encoding are encoded using the usual % notation. For example, if the charset is Latin-1, the encoded string is "lei%DF", not "lei%26%23223%3= B". That may not be the correct way to do it, but the meager empirical evid= ence I was able to gather from Mozilla and Opera suggests that's how it's do= ne. Skip
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4