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 Posted by dorayme on 09/30/06 23:03 
In article <dbyTg.23376$h02.3519@reader1.news.jippii.net>, 
 "Jukka K. Korpela" <jkorpela@cs.tut.fi> wrote: 
 
> Scripsit patrick j: 
>  
> > I'm wondering if there is a limit on the number of characters in a 
> > filename for use in a web-site? 
>  
> On the web, there are URLs, not files. If URLs happen to map to filenames in  
> a particular server, that's coincidental. 
>  
> There have been reports on browser limitations with URLs longer than 2,000  
> characters. If they are an issue to you, then you (or your users) surely  
> have serious issues. 
>  
> > However now I'm using OS X I have found myself creating quite long 
> > filenames. 
> > 
> > Should I be concerned about this? 
>  
> Yes, definitely. What makes you create quite long filenames? They won't make  
> your site more useable, will they? Did you ever try writing down even a 200  
> characters long messy URL in order to be able to visit later, after you  
> found something interesting when using a foreign computer? 
 
Your point about urls is good but this is a different issue to at  
least one particular one in the question: apart from url length  
limits, apart from user difficulties, what are the limits on file  
names themselves? To do with particular server set ups? I have  
wondered this myself. Never a problem in fact because I try to  
keep the names short. But it is a bit of a temptation for Mac OS  
X users (perhaps others too) and can conceivably be useful for  
private file management. The question of typing urls need not  
actually arise, this is a different issue. 
 
--  
dorayme
 
  
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