Dec 29, 2009 ¡P I have a HTML form that truncates the action parameter after the "?" mark - which is NOT the desired behavior I am looking for.
Feb 27, 2009 ¡P String URL = "http://localhost:1302/TESTERS/Default6.aspx"; System.Uri uri = new System.Uri(URL);. which means you can use the same methods, ...
Dec 9, 2010 ¡P iOS 9 supports Universal Links, which allows iOS to launch an app based on a standard http:// URL (based on the hostname) without the user ...
Oct 28, 2009 ¡P I have a wicket web application with Page mounted to bookmarkable alias. The page contains a form object with submit action.
Jun 9, 2010 ¡P To open a URL/website you do the following: String url = "http://www.example.com"; Intent i = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW); i.setData(Uri.parse(url)); ...
Feb 4, 2015 ¡P Register for the form's submit event; Prevent the default behavior; Construct a URL from data; Open an HTTP request with the constructed URL.
Nov 28, 2012 ¡P For 12 URLs, the simplest thing to do is just go to the 12 pages and add them, assuming they don't exist already.
Sep 6, 2015 ¡P You cannot do that using pure HTML. The form will always post/get to the URL which the action attribute of the form points to.
Aug 22, 2010 ¡P If you also want to allow "https://", I would use a regular expression like this: if (!/^https?:\/\//i.test(url)) { url = 'http://' + url; }.
Oct 23, 2010 ¡P Parameters sent on the URL or the form's attribute action are GET data parameters. They will be parsed and made available as such. Period.