Why not just make the script name "news.php" and not worry about it?

On Thu, 3 Jan 2002, Mike Eheler wrote:

> A 404 ErrorDoc would still reply with a 404 code, which could mess up
> some search engines.
>
> I was thinking of the .htaccess solution, but I'm not sure if that's
> possible to force only certain files or perhaps all files in just a
> certain directory to all be application/x-httpd-php?
>
> I guess that would be the best solution. :)
>
> Or would it? What if I have an images/ subfolder.. I certainly wouldn't
> want all my images being thrown through PHP. That could cause some
> ugliness. So I guess it would have to be un-doable. Is it?
>
> Mike
>
> Jason Murray wrote:
>
> >>"news" would actually be a PHP script, of course. I know how
> >>to handle /2002/01/02/keyword as parameters, my question is on
> >>making "news" be interpreted through PHP.
> >>
> >
> > Off the top of my head...
> >
> > You could either use a .htaccess to force Apache to recognise
> > "news" as a PHP script, or you could use a Custom 404 page to
> > figure out what the heck the original URL was trying to get at
> > and silently substitute in the resulting page.
> >
> > A Custom 404 might be easier, but would have a bit more supporting
> > infrastructure at the code end for a big site.
> >
> > Apologies if this is incorrect, I just may not be thinking
> > too clearly today :)
> >
> > Jason
> >
>
>
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