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Thread: [RESOLVED] [2008] Link Format

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    Fanatic Member space_monkey's Avatar
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    Resolved [RESOLVED] [2008] Link Format

    I'm developing websites that are primarily used on a local intranet, but i want to be sure that if someone vpn's into the network that all of my links still work.

    For example i have a directory page that has links with the format http://<server name>/<application name> and this works fine for anyone already on our local net, but if i want to connect through a vpn connection the address becomes http://<server name>.<domain name>.com/<application name>. So the previous links on the directory page will not work.

    Is it just best practice to include the domain name? Or is there a way to dynamically make the links compliant with how the user is accessing the site?

    ~S_M
    Using VB6 or VB.net 2008 with .net 3.5
    "Life... death... either way I'll be confined to a small cubicle!" - Hermes Conrad

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    I'm about to be a PowerPoster! mendhak's Avatar
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    Re: [2008] Link Format

    Don't rely on the http://hostname/ when creating links. Create them in such a way that they can be moved from http://server1/xyz to http://www.blah.com/ or http://sub.domain.com/sub/folder/anywhere. In other words, the application's 'context' of links is limited to the application folder and subfolders.

    You have the ~ (tilde) which allows you to specify links without need for a hostname.

    Hyperlink1.NavigateUrl = "~/subfolder/image.jpg"

    The ~ resolves to http://whatever.domain.com and so on.

  3. #3

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    Re: [2008] Link Format

    I should have been doing this all along.

    One other question, what about linking across subfolders. In the example above my directory page actually sits in a subfolder that is on the same level as the applications it links to, so lets say i want to link from http://hostname/directory to http://hostname/app1. If i use your example and just try to have the link set as Hyperlink1.NavigateUrl = "~/app1" the link naturally tries to take me to http://hostname/directory/app1 which of course doesn't exist.

    Is this a bad file structure or am i missing something with how to use the ~?
    Using VB6 or VB.net 2008 with .net 3.5
    "Life... death... either way I'll be confined to a small cubicle!" - Hermes Conrad

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    I'm about to be a PowerPoster! mendhak's Avatar
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    Re: [2008] Link Format

    That's a different case - you're trying to link across different different 'applications' or 'virtual directories' there, aren't you?

    I didn't know this from your first post. If /directory is external to your application /app1, then yeah, you can't use the tilde. Instead, you then rely on clever string manipulations.

    Either say

    /directory/...

    or use this:

    Request.Url.Host

    to concatenate your path to the external directory.

  5. #5

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    Re: [2008] Link Format

    Quote Originally Posted by mendhak
    That's a different case - you're trying to link across different different 'applications' or 'virtual directories' there, aren't you?

    I didn't know this from your first post. If /directory is external to your application /app1, then yeah, you can't use the tilde. Instead, you then rely on clever string manipulations.

    Either say

    /directory/...

    or use this:

    Request.Url.Host

    to concatenate your path to the external directory.
    Yeah I'm linking between two virtual directories. In the first post i was interested in the conventional way that links are handled and in the second i was interested in this specific case. So consider two questions answered.

    Thanks.
    S_M
    Using VB6 or VB.net 2008 with .net 3.5
    "Life... death... either way I'll be confined to a small cubicle!" - Hermes Conrad

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    I'm about to be a PowerPoster! mendhak's Avatar
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    Re: [RESOLVED] [2008] Link Format

    You're twice as welcome.

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