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Yeah, the duplicate subject line is because I read your post and thought about my own question and decided to post the question so I hit reply on yours, but then realized that that was going to go to the wrong list. So I changed the email address to pctech@xxxxxxxxxxxx and typed my question but forgot to change the subject line. Sounds like an episode of Green Acres, I know. :-) It may not matter why in the "where I'm coming from" in general, but the webservice I'm talking to needs to know what URL I am coming from for some kind of validation. I dunno. I'm just a programmer. What do I know about technical things? I'll figure this out eventually. I honestly don't even know if I'm even asking the right question yet or not. -----Original Message----- From: pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of daparnin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 9:03 AM To: PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users Subject: Re: [PCTECH] Posting to a page with JavaScript Shannon, Wow, you've got me seeing double--I just posted a message to Scott Klement's HTTPAPI list yesterday afternoon with the exact same subject. As a result, it sounds like we may be having similar problems. My problem is that Wells Fargo Bank is changing to a new web site with JavaScript and my program that uses Scott's HTTPAPI which has worked for almost two years is having a problem when it tries to post our file to the new site. In regards to your question, why would it matter "where you are coming from"? Wouldn't it be more of an issue of specifying the correct URL to post the file to, the content type, etc.? Are you having a problem logging in or posting the file? Dave Parnin -- Nishikawa Standard Company Topeka, IN 46571 daparnin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx "Shannon ODonnell" <sodonnell@irish-s To: "'PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users'" tudios.com> <pctech@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: cc: pctech-bounces@mid Subject: Re: [PCTECH] Posting to a page with JavaScript range.com 02/13/2006 07:56 PM Please respond to PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users This is probably badly phrased, but... Is there a way that I can tell what URL a web service thinks I am coming from from on my PC? I'm trying to interface with a web service and it appears to me that it thinks the request is coming from something like www.me.com (example) when in fact it should be coming from www.them.com (example). Is there some way I can see what URL my TCP/IP connection request appears as on the web? Something like TRACERT or NETSTAT or an equivalent? Thanks -- This is the PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users (PcTech) mailing list To post a message email: PcTech@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/pctech or email: PcTech-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/pctech.
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