[ADMIN] Re:

1998-11-30 Thread Bill Cunningham

Ken Wills wrote:

> Hi!
>
> I have an annoying problem, that I just haven't been able to get around yet. When I 
>parse the
> input from a form and go to insert it eveything works fine as long as the user 
>doesn't use
> the ' character in the input. I've tried using qw{} and qq{}, which either don't 
>interpolate
> or give me errors. Anyone have any suggestions? Postgres 6.4, Apache 1.3, mod_perl 
>1.16.
> The insert statement is below.
>
> my $query_string=qq{INSERT INTO CALLS (ca_service_id, ca_org_name, ca_phone_number, 
>ca_status,
> ca_product, ca_problem, ca_resolution, ca_contact_name, ca_assigned, ca_date) VALUES 
>('$service_id',
> '$org_name', '$phone_number', '$status', '$product', '$problem', '$resolution', 
>'$contact',
> '$assigned', '$time_now')};
>

I have the same problem with DB2. I encode the ' character as &39 or 0x39. Then on 
output I reparse the
field and display the results. (I also encode the & character or whatever I use to 
delimit the
character.)


--
Bill Cunningham
Database Development Project Lead
Bally Systems






Re: [ADMIN] Re:

1998-11-30 Thread Terry Mackintosh

Hi Ken, Bill and all

Na!
First, as a web interface you should be using PHP 3.x, you are right?

OK, that said, do this:
$chktext = ereg_replace("'", "''", $chktext);

That will take every ' in the data, and replace it with '' (2 ') which is
how you escape a ' in PostgreSQL (and all SQL?).

Hope that helps, have a great day
Terry

On Mon, 30 Nov 1998, Bill Cunningham wrote:

> Ken Wills wrote:
> 
> > Hi!
> >
> > I have an annoying problem, that I just haven't been able to get around yet. When 
>I parse the
> > input from a form and go to insert it eveything works fine as long as the user 
>doesn't use
> > the ' character in the input. I've tried using qw{} and qq{}, which either don't 
>interpolate
> > or give me errors. Anyone have any suggestions? Postgres 6.4, Apache 1.3, mod_perl 
>1.16.
> > The insert statement is below.
> >
> > my $query_string=qq{INSERT INTO CALLS (ca_service_id, ca_org_name, 
>ca_phone_number, ca_status,
> > ca_product, ca_problem, ca_resolution, ca_contact_name, ca_assigned, ca_date) 
>VALUES ('$service_id',
> > '$org_name', '$phone_number', '$status', '$product', '$problem', '$resolution', 
>'$contact',
> > '$assigned', '$time_now')};
> >
> 
> I have the same problem with DB2. I encode the ' character as &39 or 0x39. Then on 
>output I reparse the
> field and display the results. (I also encode the & character or whatever I use to 
>delimit the
> character.)
> 
> 
> --
> Bill Cunningham
> Database Development Project Lead
> Bally Systems
> 
> 
> 
> 

Terry Mackintosh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  http://www.terrym.com
sysadmin/owner  Please! No MIME encoded or HTML mail, unless needed.

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---
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Re: [ADMIN] Re:

1998-11-30 Thread The Hermit Hacker

On Mon, 30 Nov 1998, Terry Mackintosh wrote:

> Hi Ken, Bill and all
> 
> Na!
> First, as a web interface you should be using PHP 3.x, you are right?

Actually, my personal preference is perl for web interfaces
*shrug*


Marc G. Fournier
Systems Administrator @ hub.org 
primary: [EMAIL PROTECTED]   secondary: scrappy@{freebsd|postgresql}.org