th************@hotmail.com wrote in news:11**********************@o13g2000cwo.googlegr oups.com:
Dear Group
Just wondered what this meta tag is for:
<meta content="http://schemas.microsoft.com/intellisense/ie5"
name="vs_targetSchema">
Can I remove it or change it to
<meta content="https://schemas.microsoft.com/intellisense/ie5"
name="vs_targetSchema"> as I think that might be the problem of my
non-secure items warning when accessing the page with SSL.
Sorry for this question, can't test it myself at the moment but I'm
curious.
Thanks very much for your help & efforts!
Martin,
The targetSchema property only affects the behavior of Visual Studio (VS):
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en...rtyHTMLDoc.asp
or
http://tinyurl.com/3evps
The "http://schemas.microsoft.com/intellisense/ie5" portion of the meta tag is
a URN, not a URL. A URL (Uniform Resource Locator) points to a
specific location on the internet. A URN (Uniform Resource Name) does not.
A URN is just a specific name for an entity, in this case the targetSchema
VS should configure its designers for.
Changing "http" to "https" on the above URN may confuse VS, and would serve no
purpose, since the URN is just a name, and does not specify a location on the
internet[*]. Here's an explanation on the whole URL/URN/URI mess from the W3C:
http://www.w3.org/TR/uri-clarification/
[*]
Just for fun, I tried pointing my browser to
http://schemas.microsoft.com/intellisense/ie5 and
got a 404 error. Trying just
http://schemas.microsoft.com/ results in a page
with the phrase "schemas.microsoft.com" in bold letters.
--
Hope this helps.
Chris.
-------------
C.R. Timmons Consulting, Inc.
http://www.crtimmonsinc.com/