Anonymous ID: 4303a3 March 4, 2022, 12:04 p.m. No.15782387   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15782109

>How many websites do you know where [obj] is actually in the address bar after you click the link?

 

"I was reading a Word Press article recently and noticed that there is an  (OBJ) symbol in the URL. The symbol is also in the webpage title."

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/69629919/obj-symbol-in-word-press-url

 

"There’s a standard RFC3986 that defines which characters are allowed in URLs and which are not."

 

"Those that are not allowed, must be encoded, for instance non-latin letters and spaces – replaced with their UTF-8 codes, prefixed by %, such as %20 (a space can be encoded by +, for historical reasons, but that’s an exception)."

https://javascript.info/url

 

"The truth is, everything you see on a webpage is an ‘object’ of some sort. When you see [obj] on Facebook posts and even Instagram posts (note that it is not a reason for your IG post not getting posted), it only means that there’s a particular object that can’t be displayed on the screen. In other words, OBJ is nothing but a placeholder in Unicode."

https://www.techuntold.com/obj-facebook/