no but it does make it private 'like' in cakephp in that it can not be
called with the /controller/method from the browser.

On 10/17/06, Chris Hartjes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On 10/15/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Just preceed the function name with a underscore.
> >
>
> /me counts to five before replying to avoid getting labeled as angry or 
> uncaring
>
> Please note, the following rant is based on PHP, not Cake
>
> Adding an underscore to a function name DOES NOT MAKE A FUNCTION
> PRIVATE.  That is a commonly-used convention in PHP though, to make it
> easier to figure out with functions SHOULD be private if your language
> does not support making private methods of an object.
>
> Ahem.
>
> In PHP 5 you can declare a function private so that code that uses
> your object cannot access that function directly.  I take it from
> Nate's comments that it has been done already for Cake 1.2.
>
> (There, that wasn't so bad...or angry)
>
> --
> Chris Hartjes
>
> "The greatest inefficiencies come from solving problems you will never have."
> -- Rasmus Lerdorf
>
> @TheBallpark - http://www.littlehart.net/attheballpark
> @TheKeyboard - http://www.littlehart.net/atthekeyboard
>
> >
>


-- 
==
S. DeVore
(the old fart) the advice is free, the lack of crankiness will cost you

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