Received: (from majordom@localhost) by hyperreal.org (8.8.5/8.8.5) id AAA14053; Sat, 12 Jul 1997 00:30:20 -0700 (PDT) Received: from twinlark.arctic.org (twinlark.arctic.org [204.62.130.91]) by hyperreal.org (8.8.5/8.8.5) with SMTP id AAA14048 for ; Sat, 12 Jul 1997 00:30:18 -0700 (PDT) Received: (qmail 27812 invoked by uid 500); 12 Jul 1997 07:04:20 -0000 Date: Sat, 12 Jul 1997 00:04:20 -0700 (PDT) From: Dean Gaudet To: new-httpd@apache.org Subject: Re: cvs commit: apache/src CHANGES Configuration.tmpl mod_autoindex.c mod_dir.c In-Reply-To: Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Sender: new-httpd-owner@apache.org Precedence: bulk Reply-To: new-httpd@apache.org Ooooh this would be nice! Oh yeah, another feature I've frequently wanted is the ability to click one of the table headings and have it resort the table by that type. Like fetch href="?sort=date". Dean On Wed, 9 Jul 1997, Marc Slemko wrote: > My preference: change the index module so you can give it a > strftime()/sprintf() type string that specifies what information to > include and how to format it. Things could include filename, size in > different units, atime/ctime/mtime, owner, days since modified, etc. I > think that would be cool and more useful than specific directives to > alter the width of this or that. > > On Wed, 9 Jul 1997, Rodent of Unusual Size wrote: > > > >From the fingers of Dean Gaudet flowed the following: > > > > > >I'll give an untested +1 on both: > > > > > >ftp://ftp.apache.org/apache/dist/contrib/patches/1.2/IndexWidth.patch > > >ftp://ftp.apache.org/apache/dist/contrib/patches/1.2/SuppressHTMLPreamble.patch > > > > > >Ken you want to do the honours since one of those is yours? > > > > Sure. I'm not entirely satisfied with the IndexWidth one, anyway. > > I'll generate a patch to fold them both into 1.3-dev. Or does > > anyone prefer separate patches? > > > > >P.S. I'm pretty sure that IndexWidth.patch supercedes variable-dir.patch. > > > > If the latter is what I think it is, then yes, it does - it uses > > directives rather than #defines. > > > > #ken :-)} > > > >