Darin McBride wrote:
On September 3, 2004 9:52 pm, Ron Savage wrote:
On Fri, 3 Sep 2004 09:04:19 -0700 (PDT), Bill Catlan wrote:
Hi Bill
I needed the same thing ... haven't submitted a patch
yet ... below splits string paths separated by ':' :
Of course, under DOS (aka Windows), colon can be used
hello all,
I'm trying to find a way to pass multiple search paths either to
TMPL_PATH or tmpl_path in my base class and then have all my child
classes be able to access it. The problem is that C::A will wrap
whatever value is in 'tmpl_path' in [] thus creating an array of arrays
if it's an
I don't think that splitting on ':' in load_tmpl is the best way to go
about this.. however I do think that HTML::Template should split on ':'.
This would make it easy to add multiple paths using the
$ENV{HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT} (which could be set in the httpd.conf).
I do however think that
pktm wrote:
I would be happy to have an interface to load_tmpl like H::T, too.
But how can we realisize that (so that you may use the old way, too)?
If it would be possible to copy the H::T-construktor, we would be able
to get Templates from filehandles and all those sources. Wolud be
better,
On Sep 3, 2004, at 2:02 PM, Kleindenst, Fred wrote:
I don't work on Macs currently, but won't using a : as a seperator
conflict with the standard dir seperator :: on Mac?
Fred;
It's ':' that separates directories on HFS file systems. So, you can't
name a file/directory with ':' inside of Mac OS
Nathan L.Walls wrote:
On Sep 3, 2004, at 2:02 PM, Kleindenst, Fred wrote:
I don't work on Macs currently, but won't using a : as a seperator
conflict with the standard dir seperator :: on Mac?
Fred;
It's ':' that separates directories on HFS file systems. So, you can't
name a file/directory
On Fri, 3 Sep 2004 09:04:19 -0700 (PDT), Bill Catlan wrote:
Hi Bill
I needed the same thing ... haven't submitted a patch
yet ... below splits string paths separated by ':' :
Of course, under DOS (aka Windows), colon can be used as in
C:\Some\Path. So don't use colon, please.
--
Ron Savage,