W3C recommend that all '&' in query strings be converted to & This is the only way to get a piece of HTML validated. The reason is that & is the start of an HTML entity, such as £

So this:

        <a href="page.aspx?var1=one&amp;va­r2=two">link</a>
is valid, whereas:
        <a href="page.aspx?var1=one&var2=t­wo">link</a>
isn't.
If you still want to use simple Ampersand in query strings, you can set this property to true. if you want to retrieve the CuteEditor HTML content in XHTML format, the 'UseSimpleAmpersand' property will be ignored.

Namespace: CuteEditor
Assembly: CuteEditor (in CuteEditor.dll) Version: 6.7.0.0

Syntax

C#
public bool UseSimpleAmpersand { get; set; }
Visual Basic
Public Property UseSimpleAmpersand As Boolean
	Get
	Set
Visual C++
public:
property bool UseSimpleAmpersand {
	bool get ();
	void set (bool value);
}

See Also