|  | Posted by Jukka K. Korpela on 08/02/05 14:26 
"Noel" <vbgooglegroups@yahoo.com> wrote:
 > I have a textarea
 >
 >    <textarea wrap="hard" name="comment" rows="10" cols="80"></textarea>
 
 That's fine, except for the nonstandard and harmful attribute wrap="hard".
 Use wrap="off" instead; equally nonstandard, but useful, since it makes
 wowsers behave the way they are supposed to, in line wrapping (i.e., not
 mess things up by line breaks _they_ introduce).
 
 > which I want to preload by passing in some text in the URL, so I do
 >
 >    www.myhost.com/enter_info.cgi?&comment=Line%20One
 
 Stop wanting that.
 
 If the content is a meaningful and useful default content for _user input_
 (which is what textarea is for), use tools like CGI or PHP to insert the
 external content, or copy it by hand. But I doubt whether name="comment" is
 adequate then. If you are asking for a user comment, why would _you_ want
 to write that comment, or even a default for it?
 
 Did you really mean www.myhost.com? There's no reason why it could not be a
 real domain, today or tomorrow. So if you actually meant a dummy domain,
 use www.myhost.example or something similar; the .example pseudo-domain is
 guaranteed to remain nonexistent. Better still, tell us the real URL.
 
 > Now this puts "Line One" into my textarea.
 
 Maybe, depending on what your undisclosed CGI script does.
 
 > Is it possible to put another line below this e.g. "Line Two" so I see
 >
 >    Line One
 >    Line Two
 >
 > in my textarea?
 
 Of course. It all depends on your CGI script.
 
 > So, basically, I've been trying to figure out is there some code for
 > "new line" like the code %20 for a space?
 
 I'm afraid you are basically confused. Why on &Planet; would you want to
 write some complicated URL to have some simple text (passed in the query
 part in an encoded format) inserted, instead of simply inserting the text?
 
 > I can't alter the web page, I can only pass info the information using
 > "comment=" in the URL.
 
 _Which_ web page cannot be altered by you? Yours?
 
 --
 Yucca, http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/
 Pages about Web authoring: http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/www.html
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