That's right.....

I did not RTFM.....
I did not knew about this php.ini directive.
Like I've said, I was used to understand php procedure to handle sessions.

But some of ASP programmers was / is not...

Sorry to bring some lose of time.....

[]'s

Ernani



"Dj Anubis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escreveu na mensagem
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Le Mercredi 2 Octobre 2002 10:06, Ernani Joppert Pontes Martins a écrit :

> Yes I know that you can't send headers to the browser when you've already
> sent some other stuffs, but ASP users have strange feeling that this is
> weird.

That's not a PHP problem, but deals with headers and page standardization.
ASP
users should deal with standards.

> Can't we implement some procedure that checks if Cookies and session
> commands were specified in the wrong way and automatically fix this for
the
> ASP wrong programmers?
>
> If we found some cookies and session parameters on the entire script, can
> php intend to send this values to the browser w/o send that warning
message
> ?

Sounds like you did not RTFM (Read This Fine Manual) in PHP docs. If you
want
those cookies and other header stuff be transparently manipulated, you can:
1) Enable output buffering in PHP.INI
2) Use direct output buffering functions as discussed in Output Control
Functions in PHP manual.

When using output buffering, the whole body is buffered and cached while
headers are set. This is the straight answer to your problem.
But, when you don't want to buffer the page, you have to deal by yourself
with
headers, as no buffering is sending right away whatever is printed to the
browser.

> This procedure should minimize most common problems to bring PHP as the
> most Strong server side scripting language used in the entire internet.
>
> I am not a ASP fan, I had this problems while I was trying to bring more
> people to PHP and quit to implement Microsoft ASP solutions.

As stated above, this procedure exists, and is there for quite some time
now.
Maybe the biggest problem is developpers not wanting RTFM and imagining PHP
should be ASP and have the same syntax, the same bugs and [add whatever you
want]. This is quite the wrong way of thinking, exactly as if you asked C to
be syntaxically equivalent to Basic.

DJ Anubis.





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