On my pc on which I created my aspx files, my site works fine.
I use IIS5 and is does everything I want it to do.
I moved my site to the networkserver (it's a intranet site) and then
something strange happens.
On my photo page, I show a few pictures that are found in a certain folder.
But instead of seeing my pictures, I see only the placeholders with a little
icon in the left-upper corner with a red cross in it.
I know it finds the files, because if I change the filepath in the apsx
file, I get a message telling me the file cannot be found.
But why are my pictures not normaly visible?
If I go to them via an URL, I can see them in my explorer.
Because there is a list created, before the pictures are shown, I can see
that all my picture - filenames are put in that list, so the program does
find them.
it just isn't showing them.
Please advise?
rg,
EricIs it possible that your browser or a proxy server has cached a non-existent
version of the images? Make sure IE is set to get a new page every time.
I worked at a place where the system cached pages so aggressively that it
was almost impossible to tell if a problem had been fixed.
When you right-click on the missing image to check the properties, does it
give a clue as to where the server "thinks" the image is located?
Ken
"EMW" <SomeOne@.MicroSoftdotCom> wrote in message
news:40e5e76c$0$62380$5fc3050@.dreader2.news.tiscali.nl...
> On my pc on which I created my aspx files, my site works fine.
> I use IIS5 and is does everything I want it to do.
> I moved my site to the networkserver (it's a intranet site) and then
> something strange happens.
> On my photo page, I show a few pictures that are found in a certain
> folder.
> But instead of seeing my pictures, I see only the placeholders with a
> little
> icon in the left-upper corner with a red cross in it.
> I know it finds the files, because if I change the filepath in the apsx
> file, I get a message telling me the file cannot be found.
> But why are my pictures not normaly visible?
> If I go to them via an URL, I can see them in my explorer.
> Because there is a list created, before the pictures are shown, I can see
> that all my picture - filenames are put in that list, so the program does
> find them.
> it just isn't showing them.
> Please advise?
> rg,
> Eric
>
Yes, it gives the full path of where the images are located.
If I change this path a little, knowing it would never find the images, it
doesn't find them and I get an error.
I have one pulldown listbox and a datagrid on my page.
The images are in a subfolder of the folder "Fotos" and the subfoldernames
are shown in the listbox.
Then the user can select one and the datagrid becomes visible with the
images from that folder.
I works fine on my own PC when running it in VS.NET or when I go to the page
as a user and not as developer.
What could this be?
rg,
Eric
"Ken Cox [Microsoft MVP]" <BANSPAMken_cox@.sympatico.ca> schreef in bericht
news:OvSCsVKYEHA.1652@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> Is it possible that your browser or a proxy server has cached a
non-existent
> version of the images? Make sure IE is set to get a new page every time.
> I worked at a place where the system cached pages so aggressively that it
> was almost impossible to tell if a problem had been fixed.
> When you right-click on the missing image to check the properties, does it
> give a clue as to where the server "thinks" the image is located?
> Ken
>
> "EMW" <SomeOne@.MicroSoftdotCom> wrote in message
> news:40e5e76c$0$62380$5fc3050@.dreader2.news.tiscali.nl...
see
does
>
btw. I use the physical path of the application to locate the images and
pass this on to every image.
ie.: img.imageurl = "d:\inetpub\wwwroot\......\image.jpg"
There is a few folders in the dotted space, but I didn't want to write them
all...
If I call an image in IE with http:// etc. then it shows the image.
I'm puzzeled...
rg,
Eric
"Ken Cox [Microsoft MVP]" <BANSPAMken_cox@.sympatico.ca> schreef in bericht
news:OvSCsVKYEHA.1652@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> Is it possible that your browser or a proxy server has cached a
non-existent
> version of the images? Make sure IE is set to get a new page every time.
> I worked at a place where the system cached pages so aggressively that it
> was almost impossible to tell if a problem had been fixed.
> When you right-click on the missing image to check the properties, does it
> give a clue as to where the server "thinks" the image is located?
> Ken
>
> "EMW" <SomeOne@.MicroSoftdotCom> wrote in message
> news:40e5e76c$0$62380$5fc3050@.dreader2.news.tiscali.nl...
see
does
>
You can't use a physical path like that because the browser will look on the
local machine for the image. You have to use a relative path.
That's where your problem lies. You can't use the file system path that way.
Ken
"EMW" <SomeOne@.MicroSoftdotCom> wrote in message
news:40e67498$0$62399$5fc3050@.dreader2.news.tiscali.nl...
> btw. I use the physical path of the application to locate the images and
> pass this on to every image.
> ie.: img.imageurl = "d:\inetpub\wwwroot\......\image.jpg"
> There is a few folders in the dotted space, but I didn't want to write
> them
> all...
> If I call an image in IE with http:// etc. then it shows the image.
> I'm puzzeled...
> rg,
> Eric
>
> "Ken Cox [Microsoft MVP]" <BANSPAMken_cox@.sympatico.ca> schreef in bericht
> news:OvSCsVKYEHA.1652@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> non-existent
> see
> does
>
Finally solved it. This page helped:
http://west-wind.com/weblog/posts/269.aspx
for the imageurl I needed to use "~/fotos/image1.jpg".
thanks!
Eric
"Ken Cox [Microsoft MVP]" <BANSPAMken_cox@.sympatico.ca> schreef in bericht
news:ui$AEEQYEHA.2364@.TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
> You can't use a physical path like that because the browser will look on
the
> local machine for the image. You have to use a relative path.
> That's where your problem lies. You can't use the file system path that
way.
> Ken
> "EMW" <SomeOne@.MicroSoftdotCom> wrote in message
> news:40e67498$0$62399$5fc3050@.dreader2.news.tiscali.nl...
bericht
time.
it
apsx
>
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