Q: LinkChecker produced an error, but my web page is ok with
   Netscape/IE/Opera/...
   Is this a bug in LinkChecker?
A: Please check your web pages first. Are they really ok? Use
   a syntax highlighting Editor! Use HTML Tidy from www.w3c.org!
   Check if the web server is accepting HEAD requests as well.


Q: The link "mailto:john@company.com?subject=Hello John" is reported
   as an error.
A: You have to quote special characters (e.g. spaces) in the subject field.
   The correct link should be "mailto:...?subject=Hello%20John"
   Unfortunately browsers like IE and Netscape do not enforce this.


Q: Has LinkChecker JavaScript support?
A: No. It never will. JavaScript sucks. If your page is not
   working without JS, then your web design is broken (or you
   cannot code ;). Learn PHP or Zope or ASP, but use JavaScript just
   as an addon for your web pages.


Q: I have a pretty large site to check. How can I restrict link checking
   to check only my own pages?
A: Look at the options --intern, --extern, --strict, --denyallow  and 
   --recursion-level.


Q: I dont get this --extern/--intern stuff.
A: When it comes to checking there are three types of URLs:
   1) strict URLs:
      we do only syntax checking
   2) extern URLs:
      like 1), but we additionally check if they are valid by connect()ing 
      to them
   3) intern URLs:
      like 2), but we additionally check if they are HTML pages and if so,
      we descend recursively into this link and check all the links in the
      HTML content.
      The --recursion-level option restricts the number of such recursive
      descends.

   LinkChecker provides four options which affect URLs to fall in one
   of those three categories: --intern, --extern, --strict and
   --denyallow.
   By default all URLs are intern. With --extern you specify what URLs
   are extern. With --intern you specify what URLs are intern.
   Now imagine you have both --extern and --intern. What happens
   when an URL matches both patterns? Or when it matches none? In this
   situation the --denyallow option specifies the order in which we match
   the URL. By default it is intern/extern, with --denyallow the order is
   extern/intern. Either way, the first match counts, and if none matches,
   the last checked category is the category for the URL.
   Finally, with --strict all extern URLs are strict.
   
   Oh, and just to boggle your mind: you can have more than one extern
   regular expression in a config file and for each of those expressions
   you can specify if those matched extern URLs should be strict or not.

   An example. Assume we want to check only urls of our domains named
   'mydomain.com' and 'myotherdomain.com'. Then we specify
   -i'^http://my(other)?domain\.com' as intern regular expression, all other
   urls are treated extern. Easy.
