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			33 lines
		
	
	
		
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			33 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.5 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| Notes about plugins
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|  I have users that want to visit my pages with tclets, but they do not
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|     have the plugin. What can I do?
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| 
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| 	Add a pluginspage=http://www.sunlabs.com/tcl/plugin/ name=value
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| 	pair to the embed statement. This will cause Navigator to find
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| 	the plugin for your user and suggest they install it. The user
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| 	is then prompted to download and install the plugin, and then she
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| 	has to restart the browser and revisit your page. Very inconvenient
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| 	and only slightly better than giving your users the broken image
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| 	icon. Netscape says they are working on a more automatic solution.
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| 
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| 
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| 14. Your demos work just fine, but when I visit my own pages with tclets in
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|     them, at http://www.myserver.com/~mypages/mypage.html, I still get the
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|     broken image icon. Why doesn't it work for me?
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| 
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| 	This is likely because your web server -- the program that sends
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| 	the pages to your browser when you click on a URL -- is not
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| 	sending the right mime-type when it sends the '.tcl' file. You
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| 	can work around this by adding a type=application/x-tcl name=value
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| 	pair to the embed statement, which will cause Navigator to infer
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| 	that it should use the Tcl plugin anyways. A better solution is
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| 	to ask your system administrator to configure the web server to
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| 	send the mime type application/x-tcl when it sends files with a
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| 	'.tcl' extension. Nearly all web servers in the world nowadays
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| 	are already configured to do this, the only ones we are aware of
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| 	that do not are some older versions of Apache.
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