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This is part of the standard for HTTP, so you should design your programs to be capable of handling them. Even if only Mozilla happens to do it in the current software releases, other browsers could change their behavior to do the same thing in the future. I don't know whether IBM supplies an API function for this (I don't do my web stuff on the iSeries) but maybe you could ask the people over on the web400 mailing list? Otherwise, you could write a routine to handle it... On Sun, 19 Jan 2003, sublime78ska wrote: > > I am using QtmhRdStin to read from std in and QtmhCvtDb to parse the data. > When users use Mozilla, invariant characters come across as ascii text. So > the @ sign is %40. When QtmhCvtDb returns, %40 is replaced with a blank. > > Does anyone know what to do about this situation? Or why it's happening? >
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