Hard to imagine that in the two decades of its existence this product once ruled supreme, but the news is finally there:
RIP Internet Explorer: Twitter mourns and mocks death of Microsoft (0 Replies)
Hi,
What must have happen to my internet explorer that flashes whenever it want to load. The page after trying to load would just logout. I have tried to reset most of the setting on the properties but all to no avail. Can someone pls assist.
Thanx (1 Reply)
Downloaded and installed, when I try to execute iexplorer it responds with "iexplorer: not found", but it is right there in the directory I am in and I im logged in as root. any ideas? (3 Replies)
Hello,
i'm running a hp-ux workstation model 715 / 100 with hp-ux version 11.11
i need a microsoft internet explorer for this workstation to make some tests. does anyone know where i can cat a internet explorer 4.01 for my workstation?
Thank all for help! ;-) (3 Replies)
I Have SCO OpenServer 5 with Netscape Navigator, but I'll like to try Internet Explorer to see how it workd on Unix. I don't know where I can find (If there is) a version compatible with SCO OpenServer! (2 Replies)
HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft(3)NAME
HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft - access to Microsoft cookies files
SYNOPSIS
use LWP;
use HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft;
use Win32::TieRegistry(Delimiter => "/");
my $cookies_dir = $Registry->
{"CUser/Software/Microsoft/Windows/CurrentVersion/Explorer/Shell Folders/Cookies"};
$cookie_jar = HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft->new(
file => "$cookies_dir\index.dat",
'delayload' => 1,
);
my $browser = LWP::UserAgent->new;
$browser->cookie_jar( $cookie_jar );
DESCRIPTION
This is a subclass of "HTTP::Cookies" which loads Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.x and 6.x for Windows (MSIE) cookie files.
See the documentation for HTTP::Cookies.
METHODS
The following methods are provided:
$cookie_jar = HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft->new;
The constructor takes hash style parameters. In addition to the regular HTTP::Cookies parameters, HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft recognizes
the following:
delayload: delay loading of cookie data until a request
is actually made. This results in faster
runtime unless you use most of the cookies
since only the domain's cookie data
is loaded on demand.
CAVEATS
Please note that the code DOESN'T support saving to the MSIE cookie file format.
AUTHOR
Johnny Lee <typo_pl@hotmail.com>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2002 Johnny Lee
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.16.3 2012-02-15 HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft(3)