"What was the answer you were looking for?"
I am looking for something helpful and you've responded both times
with a whole bunch of nothing, you've spent a lot of time writing when
you should have said to yourself "I don't really know anything that
can help so I'll leave this post to someone that does."
I'll state again that I realize that it is the code and I'm looking
for something constructive that can help me narrow down what the
problem with.
The img and href tags are properly formed and work fine when they
point to a static url, however, whenever I include
data passed from the controller in them, it will cause the $this-
>Session->check('User') to fail in the controller. The page renders
correctly, the tags are formed correctly and work, they just cause the
session check to fail.
Also, I can include any variables that are defined in the view withing
the tags without any problems, just when I use data from the
controller in an href tag or src tag do I have this problem.
The data from the controller works fine everywhere else and will not
cause the session check to fail. If anyone has any concise ideas about
what I can do to help fix this problem PLEASE help. I am not looking
for "the code's broke" I already know this and that's why I came here
in the first place.
On Dec 19, 11:22 am, "Chris Hartjes" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 19, 2007 1:06 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > href tag in the view. I appreciate the reply, but saying "it's the
> > code" is not very productive, of course something is wrong with the
> > code, I'm just trying to see if anyone has any ideas about what it
> > could be (ie if anyone has seen this before, how did they fix it).
>
> Why is it when someone is told that the non-core code they are using
> or have written isn't working properly, they get all defensive and
> complain that being told that fact is 'not very productive'? I know
> this will come as a shock to many people, but I have written both good
> code and shitty code. Most of the time when a problem with a CakePHP
> app occurs, it's because of the shitty non-core code that someone has
> written.
>
> What was the answer you were looking for? "Yes, it must be CakePHP's
> fault that some part of the non-core code is messing with the contents
> of a session".
>
> I will restate what I said before: there is nothing about adding
> properly-formed href tags or properly formed img-src tags to a page
> that will cause sessions to not work properly. Therefore, it must be
> a problem in the code. I will gladly change my mind when presented
> with evidence to the contrary.
>
> Just because you don't like the answer doesn't mean that it isn't
> helpful or isn't valid.
>
> --
> Chris Hartjes
>
> My motto for 2007: "Just build it, damnit!"
>
> @TheKeyboard -http://www.littlehart.net/atthekeyboard
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