At 07:22 26-05-2009, sandoche BALAKRICHENAN wrote:
An example from RFC 3403
The URN might look like this:
urn:cid:199606121851.1@bar.example.com
This Application's First Well Known Rule is to extract the characters
between the first and second colon. For this URN that would be
'cid'.
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 10:48:49AM +0100,
Niall O'Reilly wrote
a message of 24 lines which said:
> OT for bind-users,
OK, but see later.
> what other string is available?
The domain name.
> Let's find a better list for discussing the mysteries of DDDS.
> It would be
sandoche BALAKRICHENAN wrote:
REGEXP - A containing a substitution expression that
is applied to the original string
==> Anyone have an idea why it always should be applied to the original
string?
OT for bind-users, so I'll give the shortest answer I can:
what other string
An example from RFC 3403
The URN might look like this:
urn:cid:199606121851.1@bar.example.com
This Application's First Well Known Rule is to extract the characters
between the first and second colon. For this URN that would be
'cid'. The Application also specifies that, in order to bui
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