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Author Enforcers 216 QOD (8/11)
enforcer

2003-09-08, 6:56 am

What characters are not valid in a Fully Qualified Domain Name? Choose all that apply..

A. The characters a-z

B. The characters 0-9

C. The characters A-Z

D. The characters 1-5

E. The underscore character (_)

F. The dash character (-)

G. The period character (.)

Answer Tomorrow




22
karlisi

2003-09-08, 7:08 am

Welcome back
E; G
hairy51

2003-09-08, 8:22 am

def. e+g
SVR1

2003-09-08, 12:01 pm

E and G

welcome back, i think you got the date wrong on the QOD though
cramersaunders

2003-09-08, 2:08 pm

E G
enforcer

2003-09-09, 4:59 am

quote:
Originally posted by enforcer
What characters are not valid in a Fully Qualified Domain Name? Choose all that apply..

A. The characters a-z

B. The characters 0-9

C. The characters A-Z

D. The characters 1-5

E. The underscore character (_)

F. The dash character (-)

G. The period character (.)

Answer Tomorrow





And the answer is E. The underscore character (_)

From the Introduction to DNS chapter of the Windows 2000 Resource Kit, FQDNs have naming restrictions that allow only the use of characters a-z, A-Z, 0-9, and the dash or minus sign (-). The use of the period (.) is allowed only between domain name labels (for example, "reskit.com") or at the end of a FQDN. Domain names are not case-sensitive.



sorry about the date, not quite sure what really happened there.
karlisi

2003-09-09, 5:21 am

quote:
Originally posted by enforcer
And the answer is E. The underscore character (_)

I disagree with you. Please read by sentences:
quote:
From the Introduction to DNS chapter of the Windows 2000 Resource Kit, FQDNs have naming restrictions that allow only the use of characters a-z, A-Z, 0-9, and the dash or minus sign (-).

And thats all. The next sentence is about separating parts of FQDN with period, not about something allowed in FQDN.
quote:
The use of the period (.) is allowed only between domain name labels (for example, "reskit.com") or at the end of a FQDN.

If your answer is right then it is allowed to use backslash (\) in file names. We know it is not allowed. Or you think it is something different?
SVR1

2003-09-09, 10:13 am

agree with karlisi
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