Adding Line Breaks to Output
Written by Eric Smith, Northstar Computer Systems LLC
Even though you can create an extremely long string and then print it using Response.Write, remember that you might have to go back into your HTML to debug a problem. For this reason, you can include a line feed character to the HTML output whenever the line is getting too long. Here's an example:
Response.Write "<h3>A string goes here.</h3>" & vbCrLf
This will add a line break after the HTML code line. Remember that using the vbCrLf constant won't add a line break in the displayed text -- it only shows up in the HTML code. If you need that, use a or tag in the content you're printing out.
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Publication Date: 8/1/1999, Last Update: 2/12/2010
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