Yes - it is J and I.  I tried using $i+1 in the echo originally but it 
wouldn't run.  That's why I created $j.
And just what is wrong with the old cr/lf sequence?  How would you have done 
it?
What do you mean 'this alone .....'?
"Tamara Temple" <tamouse.li...@gmail.com> wrote in message 
news:521bdb9d-adbf-45d7-b759-acd315b19...@gmail.com...
>
> On Mar 22, 2011, at 8:42 PM, Jim Giner wrote:
>
>> ok - here's the code in question.
>> $q = 'select * from director_records ';
>> $qrslt = mysql_query($q);
>> $rows = mysql_num_rows($qrslt);
>> for ($i=0; $i<$rows; $i++)
>>    {
>>    $j = $i+1;
>
> Am i reading this correctly: the first variable is j (jay) the second 
> variable is i (eye) ?
>
> This alone doesn't explain anything...
>
>>    $row = mysql_fetch_array($qrslt);
>>    echo $j.'-'.$row['userid'];
>
> Since this is the only place $j is used, try subbing in $i+1 and see  what 
> you get.
>
>>    if ($row['user_priv']<> "")
>>        echo ' ('.$row['user_priv'].')&#13&#10';
>
> This is really rather a strange way of getting a line break.
>
>>    else
>>        echo '&#13&#10';
>>    }
>>
>>
>> The output I get is:
>>
>>
>> 1-smith5
>> f-ginerjm (M)
>> g-smith8
>>
>> While the alpha parts are valid, the index is only correct for the  first 
>> one
>> (0) obviously.
>>
>>
>>
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> 



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