It's an interresting point here. Let's see this quote from RFC 1808
(by R. Fielding):
|2.4.1. Parsing the Fragment Identifier
|
| If the parse string contains a crosshatch "#" character, then the
| substring after the first (left-most) crosshatch "#" and up to the
| end of the parse string is the <fragment> identifier. If the
| crosshatch is the last character, or no crosshatch is present, then
| the fragment identifier is empty. The matched substring, including
| the crosshatch character, is removed from the parse string before
| continuing.
|
| Note that the fragment identifier is not considered part of the URL.
| However, since it is often attached to the URL, parsers must be able
| to recognize and set aside fragment identifiers as part of the
| process.
|
It states clearly 'the first (left-most) crosshatch "#" and up to the
end of the parse string is the <fragment> identifier'. This _does_ imply
that there are more '#' characters than one ... Why say ``leftmost "#"
character'' if there is only one allowed ? -- Mirsad
> ...Roy T. Fielding
> Department of Information & Computer Science ([email protected])
> University of California, Irvine, CA 92717-3425 fax:+1(714)824-4056
> http://www.ics.uci.edu/~fielding/
>
>
--
Mirsad Todorovac at Electrical Engineering Faculty, University Zagreb, Croatia
[email protected], [email protected]