You're trying to use double quotes, in which the variable is evaluated and the stored
value is shown, right? Try using single quotes. For example, with $name = Martin.
echo My name is $name.;
OUTPUT: My name is Martin.
echo 'My name is $name.';
OUTPUT: My name is $name.
It's interpreted
On Wed, 24 Jul 2002 16:49:38 -0400
Martin Clifford Martin Clifford [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You're trying to use double quotes, in which the variable is
evaluated and the stored value is shown, right? Try using single
quotes. For example, with $name = Martin.
echo My name is $name.;
On Thursday 25 July 2002 05:11, Raquel Rice wrote:
Thank you, Martin, for your informative response. If I understand
correctly what you're saying, it would work to do (in psuedo code
and reduce to simplest form):
store_to_db(text = My name is $name.)
Here $name will be evaluated and
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
I've run out of ideas. I want to store a variable name and a
function call in a text column of a MySQL database and have them
interpreted at runtime, but I can't figure out how to do it.
Examples:
This is the $nbrtimes you've