On Friday 18 January 2002 17:00, you wrote: FYI, In windows a newline is usualy made by CRLF (Carriage Return (\r) , Line Feed (\n)), in linux/unix it's usually just LF (\n)
> Jason Murray wrote: > >>: Don't know why it's got everyone else stumped. > >>: > >>: "\n" is the new line character. Make sure you use it in "" and > >>: not in ''. > >>: > >>: Jason > >> > >>Unfortunately, that doesn't work either, it changes the \n that > >>appeared at the end of the new line to a single black block. It > >>does not put the next quote onto a new line. > > > > Ah, so you're opening the file in something that doesn't understand > > newlines and prefers line feeds, then. > > > > In that case you'll want to use \r instead of \n. > > Na, he's posting using MS Outlook so I guess he is using Windows. In > that case use "\r\n". -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To contact the list administrators, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]