Re: Crypto example miss-typeo

Hadi Mettawa (hmettawa@mail.cybg.com)
Tue, 30 Jun 1998 15:09:12 -0400

To: <schemers@Eng>, "Marianne Mueller" <Marianne.Mueller@Eng>
Subject: Re: Crypto example miss-typeo
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 1998 15:09:12 -0400
From: "Hadi Mettawa" <hmettawa@mail.cybg.com>

Thanks for all your help, It is working know...

thanks

-----Original Message-----
From: schemers@Eng.Sun.COM <schemers@Eng.Sun.COM>
To: Marianne Mueller <Marianne.Mueller@Eng.Sun.COM>
Cc: java-security@java0.javasoft.com <java-security@java0.javasoft.com>;
hmettawa@mail.cybg.com <hmettawa@mail.cybg.com>
Date: Tuesday, June 30, 1998 2:58 PM
Subject: Re: Crypto example miss-typeo

>Believe it or not (if I recall correctly :-)), you must still use
>&lt; inside of <pre></pre> blocks. I think <pre> refers to how
>the text is layed out, not the interpretation of special characters.
>I think Jan and I verified this when he fixed the javadocs.
>
>roland
>
>Marianne Mueller writes:
>> Like Jan said, your copy of the API User's Guide is OK. Browsers don't
>> display Java code (or C code, or C++ code, or ...) properly, even inside
>> <pre></pre> or <code></code>.
>>
>> When they see < they think it's an HTML command, and they swallow the
>> text after that until they see >.
>>
>> This might be proper SGML/HTML spec behavior, I don't know. I know
>> you can cause < to be printed by using &lt; but then the code *really*
>> won't compile. What you need to do is copy the code example from
>> API_users_guide.html to some other example.java file and look at it that
>> way and compile it from the .java file.
>>
>>
>>
>