Greetings, Richard Heyes.
In reply to Your message dated Tuesday, November 18, 2008, 18:34:27,
In looking at the manual regarding tagging, it seems an awful chore
compared to CVS.
It only seems.
In fact, the copy command only creating a reference to the specific
revision. So, nothing, at all,
On Sun, 2008-11-23 at 16:01 -0800, Richard Kurth wrote:
I need to make a bunch of emails bounce in different ways so I can check
to see if my script to read a mail box full of bounced emails will work
properly.
Does any body know how I can do this.
Send some flubber as an attachment and...
On Nov 23, 2008, at 7:01 PM, Richard Kurth wrote:
I need to make a bunch of emails bounce in different ways so I can
check to see if my script to read a mail box full of bounced emails
will work properly.
Does any body know how I can do this.
If you have access to a Mac, in Apples
Hi,
I need to make a bunch of emails bounce in different ways
Carve them into some rubber and throw them at the flloor at different
angles... :-)
--
Richard Heyes
HTML5 Graphing for FF, Chrome, Opera and Safari:
http://www.rgraph.org (Updated November 15th)
--
PHP General Mailing List
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 12:53 +, Richard Heyes wrote:
Hi,
I need to make a bunch of emails bounce in different ways
Carve them into some rubber and throw them at the flloor at different
angles... :-)
--
Richard Heyes
HTML5 Graphing for FF, Chrome, Opera and Safari:
If you have a previous bounce message then something like Mail Redirect
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/addon/550 extension in
thunderbird might work. You simply bounce the email to yourself, or from
one account to another.
I've used it quite often to test procmail rules, and the
Stut,
Shouting is something that happens when people are actually speaking and
listening. In a medium where there is no other way to emphasize salient
points in a message, capitalization is all that works. I'm sorry it
offended your sensabilities.
realpath() fails, just like file_exists()
On 24 Nov 2008, at 14:41, Stan wrote:
Shouting is something that happens when people are actually speaking
and
listening. In a medium where there is no other way to emphasize
salient
points in a message, capitalization is all that works. I'm sorry it
offended your sensabilities.
It's
robert arnesson schreef:
A. There is no more to the log
B. There are no calls to error_log()
PHP is installed as CGI, I will check the ScriptLog dir (good tip!).
I forgot to mention that this occurres on a few php-files only.. the rest is
working fine. And there are no major differences
There are no calls to error_log in the files, however, I took care of some
notices in the code (with error_reporting to E_ALL - there where only
notices - no errors or warnings) and suddenly the number of entries in the
error log dropped. Getting rid of all notices will probably solve the
problem.
Can anyone help explain what I need to do to fix this:
Error: *Warning*: mysql_fetch_object(): supplied argument is not a valid
MySQL result resource in *
C:\Inetpub\wwwroot\WorkOrderSystem\ViewWorkOrder.php* on line *57*
*Warning*: mysql_num_rows(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result
Terion Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can anyone help explain what I need to do to fix this:
Error: *Warning*: mysql_fetch_object(): supplied argument is not a valid
MySQL result resource in *
C:\Inetpub\wwwroot\WorkOrderSystem\ViewWorkOrder.php* on line *57*
*Warning*:
I added an echo and got this:
Query failed: Unknown column 'WorkOrderNumber' in 'field list' Actual
query: but the actual query is blank
and as I have stated before when I have had questions on this list, I am NOT
a php programmer, just learning and inherited a job with tons of php already
in
On 24 Nov 2008, at 17:28, Terion Miller wrote:
Can anyone help explain what I need to do to fix this:
Error: *Warning*: mysql_fetch_object(): supplied argument is not a
valid
MySQL result resource in *
C:\Inetpub\wwwroot\WorkOrderSystem\ViewWorkOrder.php* on line *57*
*Warning*:
this was the code I posted that accidentally only went to Wolf:
what does STFW mean?
?php
include(inc/dbconn_open.php);
if (empty($_SESSION['AdminLogin']) OR $_SESSION['AdminLogin'] 'OK' ){
?
script language=javascript
window.close();
/script
?php
exit();
}
if
Bottom POST when mailing the list.
My responses inline and at the bottom
Terion Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
this was the code I posted that accidentally only went to Wolf:
what does STFW mean?
Folks;
Just as a reminder, the PostTrack/ListWatch system is back to
recording and reporting data on the list for the Friday summary
reports and list metrics. If you do not want your email address to
show up in the reports and have not already told me, please let me
know ASAP and I will
Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Folks;
Just as a reminder, the PostTrack/ListWatch system is back to
recording and reporting data on the list for the Friday summary
reports and list metrics. If you do not want your email address to
show up in the reports and have not
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 2:49 PM, Wolf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sure Dan, just pad your metrics with yet another post... :)
Much like you just did. ;-P
Have a good Thanksgiving as well! Make sure to eat lots of turkey so you
sleep through the list emails!
I'll actually be
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 10:02 AM, Stut [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 24 Nov 2008, at 14:41, Stan wrote:
Shouting is something that happens when people are actually speaking and
listening. In a medium where there is no other way to emphasize salient
points in a message, capitalization is all
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Ashley Sheridan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What exactly are these metrics? Are they part of the mailing list?
Yes, last year and earlier this year, before you began
contributing to the list, there was a tracking system that displayed a
simple report[1] each
On Nov 24, 2008, at 3:00 PM, Daniel P. Brown wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 2:49 PM, Wolf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sure Dan, just pad your metrics with yet another post... :)
Much like you just did. ;-P
Nahhh If we was going for that he would just get it stuck in an
endless
Hi.
This post has also been posted on the Debian list.
I have two different Debian Etch machines running with the exact same
packages installed, when I use PHP memcached with compression (zlib) it
works at one machine but not the other. No errors are thrown.
I need to know why it is only
Try debug_backtrace()
Rico Secada wrote:
Hi.
This post has also been posted on the Debian list.
I have two different Debian Etch machines running with the exact same
packages installed, when I use PHP memcached with compression (zlib) it
works at one machine but not the other. No errors are
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 15:04 -0500, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Ashley Sheridan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What exactly are these metrics? Are they part of the mailing list?
Yes, last year and earlier this year, before you began
contributing to the list, there
On 24 Nov 2008, at 20:21, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 15:04 -0500, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Ashley Sheridan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What exactly are these metrics? Are they part of the mailing list?
Yes, last year and earlier this year,
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 20:30 +, Stut wrote:
On 24 Nov 2008, at 20:21, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 15:04 -0500, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Ashley Sheridan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What exactly are these metrics? Are they part of the mailing
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 14:45 -0500, Daniel Brown wrote:
Folks;
Just as a reminder, the PostTrack/ListWatch system is back to
recording and reporting data on the list for the Friday summary
reports and list metrics. If you do not want your email address to
show up in the reports and have
On 24 Nov 2008, at 20:35, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 20:30 +, Stut wrote:
On 24 Nov 2008, at 20:21, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 15:04 -0500, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Ashley Sheridan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What exactly are
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:05 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]wrote:
On Nov 24, 2008, at 3:00 PM, Daniel P. Brown wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 2:49 PM, Wolf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sure Dan, just pad your metrics with yet another post... :)
Much like you just did. ;-P
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 20:45 +, Stut wrote:
On 24 Nov 2008, at 20:35, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 20:30 +, Stut wrote:
On 24 Nov 2008, at 20:21, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 15:04 -0500, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Ashley
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:45 PM, Stut [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I didn't write it, but I'd say it receives the emails sent to the list as a
subscriber just like you and I do, logs the statistics and sends a weekly
report to the list indicating the most active users.
Sorry, had to run away
Daniel Brown wrote:
Folks;
Just as a reminder, the PostTrack/ListWatch system is back to
recording and reporting data on the list for the Friday summary
reports and list metrics. If you do not want your email address to
show up in the reports and have not already told me, please let me
On Mon, 24 Nov 2008 15:13:32 -0500
Al [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Try debug_backtrace()
Thanks for your reply.
I get an empty array:
array(0) { }
Rico Secada wrote:
Hi.
This post has also been posted on the Debian list.
I have two different Debian Etch machines running with the
Hi,
i would ask what is the best method for random select from database. I
have table with 20k items..
- If i use ,,select * from table order by rand() limit 3, the query
took 0.0524 sec ... its slightly enough
- but if i generate rand id and then i use ,,select where id
Korgan wrote:
Hi,
i would ask what is the best method for random select from database. I
have table with 20k items..
- If i use ,,select * from table order by rand() limit 3, the query
took 0.0524 sec ... its slightly enough
and as your table grows in size, it gets slower and slower.
For large tables, I generally create a static_rand column, and pre-populated
it with random numbers and create an index on it.
Then, after using up the records, I have application logic to reset those
records (and only those records) to new random numbers.
This provides MUCH better
thx it looks good
[EMAIL PROTECTED] napsal(a):
For large tables, I generally create a static_rand column, and pre-populated
it with random numbers and create an index on it.
Then, after using up the records, I have application logic to reset those
records (and only those records) to new
Hey guys,
So, I was working on my framework today, and noticed unfortunately that
PHP does not allow using the magic method __get for static variables.
There is a patch available, but I'm not sure how long it will be before
it makes it into the stable PHP release.
Anyway, my question is
What would you do?
I think PHP's string functions are pretty fast and even with large
documents we are talking about a couple of extra microseconds on a
modern machine. I once saw someone do pretty much the same as you are
trying to do with strtr() [1], but I don't know if that function is
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