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Here's a quick and easy question for anyone who knows javascript. When you use "request("Param")" to retrieve the value of a query parameter, is the "Param" case-sensitive or not? That is, if the query string had "?param=12" but you use "Param" with a capital P, will it work?

2006-11-08 06:38:27 · 6 answers · asked by AZKludgeQueen 2 in Computers & Internet Programming & Design

6 answers

I'm fairly sure it's case insensitive.

2006-11-08 06:40:29 · answer #1 · answered by boris 5 · 0 1

Java Script is case sensitive. The value passed to the function should exactly match the value in the query string

Hope that helps

2006-11-08 06:53:02 · answer #2 · answered by americanDesi 2 · 0 0

Param isn't param isn't PARAM.

very case sensitive! Like any modern programming language!

interestingly, very early js wasn't always! and HTML is not (XHTML is)

2006-11-08 07:11:47 · answer #3 · answered by jake cigar™ is retired 7 · 0 0

quite a few mistakes some in coding syntax, some in common sense... The 'elseif' idiom it really is difficulty-loose in seen undemanding isn't cautioned in javascript. be careful now to not use reserved words or variable names that are the picture of function names. html head d5d3db1765287eef77d7927cc956f5aMore JavaScriptd5d3db1765287eef77d7927cc956f5a head body