The second example was one that worked(as taken from
www.google.com/linux) that searched that search engine. I got the options from the html source of it.
On 31 Oct 2002 08:09:55 -0700
"Ted Gould" <
ted@gould.cx> wrote:
> I haven't done this before, but from the example I think you have this
> backwards.
>
> > <form ACTION="
http://www.google.com/linux">
>
> I think that this you want to leave at:
http://www.google.com/custom.
> This the CGI that the data is passed to. I'm betting that there isn't
> more than one of these.
>
> > <input TYPE="hidden" NAME="site" VALUE="search">
> > <input TYPE="hidden" NAME="restrict" VALUE="linux">
> > <input TYPE="hidden" NAME="hl" VALUE="en">
> > <input TYPE="hidden" NAME="num" VALUE="50">
> > <input TYPE="hidden" NAME="lr" VALUE="lang_en">
> > <input TYPE="hidden" NAME="ie" VALUE="ISO-8859-1">
> > <input TYPE="hidden" NAME="safe" VALUE="off">
>
> You left off the DOMAINS input from the previous example:
>
> <INPUT TYPE="HIDDEN" NAME="DOMAINS" VALUE="
www.gentoo.org">
>
> I'm think this is where you would set the scope of the search. So if
> you wanted it to search linux.com you would make the value like this:
>
> <INPUT TYPE="HIDDEN" NAME="DOMAINS" VALUE="linux.com">
>
> Because it's plural I imagine there is some way to list the values in
> this field. Probably commas or semicolons.
>
> > <input TYPE=text NAME="q" SIZE="16" MAXLENGTH="2048" VALUE="">
> > <input TYPE=submit NAME=btnG VALUE="Go">
> > </form>
>
> Have fun,
> Ted
>
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