HackerOne users: Testing against this community violates our program's Terms of Service and will result in your bounty being denied.
Search
-
Re: Parentheses in a URL break the link
They do in this case. There for you have to take into consideration both meaning that after # you cannot have these character if pointing to a web page. Of course standard are to be taken with a pinch of salt even google knows that. Sometime you have to bend the rule round the ends. The problem with many of these standards… -
Re: Parentheses in a URL break the link
Did you read the actual RFC? That is the only authoritive reference, and you will note that the W3 pages also simply refer to the RFCs. Named anchors do not factor into it. Those are just one of the many use cases for URL fragments. And yes, a valid workaround and probably a better solution in this case is to use a URL…
2 results