On Tue, 2011-01-11 at 11:13 -0800, Richard S. Crawford wrote:
I'm retrieving CLOB data from an Oracle database, and cleaning up the HTML
in it. I'm using the following commands:
$content =
strip_tags($description-fields['CONTENT'],'polulli');
$content =
On Tue, Jan 11, 2011 at 14:13, Richard S. Crawford
rich...@underpope.com wrote:
$content = str_replace(chr(13),$content)
and
$content = str_replace(array('\n','\r','\r\n'),$content)
Neither of these have replacement values, which might just be a
typo. However, the larger issue is in
On Tue, Jan 11, 2011 at 11:13 AM, Richard S. Crawford rich...@underpope.com
wrote:
$content = preg_replace(/[.chr(10).|.chr(13).]/,,$content)
This should be
$content = preg_replace('/[\r\n]/','',$content)
First, you can embed \r and \n directly in the regular expression as-is (not
Strangely, when I use \n, or nl2br(), or PHP_EOL, or anything like that, it
strips out not just line breaks, but most of the rest of the text as well. I
suspect an encoding issue at this point.
Daniel, you were right when you said that neither of my str_replace lines
had repl.acement values; that
On Jan 11, 2011, at 11:34 AM, Richard S. Crawford wrote:
Strangely, when I use \n, or nl2br(), or PHP_EOL, or anything like that, it
strips out not just line breaks, but most of the rest of the text as well. I
suspect an encoding issue at this point.
Daniel, you were right when you said
On 1/11/2011 11:13 AM, Richard S. Crawford wrote:
I'm retrieving CLOB data from an Oracle database, and cleaning up the HTML
in it. I'm using the following commands:
$content =
strip_tags($description-fields['CONTENT'],'polulli');
$content = preg_replace(/p.*/,p,$content);
The
On 23 June 2010 01:03, Rick Dwyer rpdw...@earthlink.net wrote:
$find = '/[^a-z0-9]/i';
Replace that with ...
$find = '/[^a-z0-9]++/i';
And now you only need ...
$new_string = trim(preg_replace($find, $replace, $old_string));
--
-
Richard Quadling
Standing on the shoulders of some very
Hello,
can this resolve your problem?
$trans = array(
from = to,
another = to);
$moditem = StrTr($moditem, $trans);
-- http://cz.php.net/manual/en/function.strtr.php
David
-Original Message-
From: Rick Dwyer [mailto:rpdw...@earthlink.net]
Sent: Tuesday, June 22, 2010 5:41 PM
To:
On Tue, 2010-06-22 at 11:40 -0400, Rick Dwyer wrote:
Hello List.
I need to remove characters from a string and replace them with and
underscore.
So instead of having something like:
$moditem = str_replace(--,_,$mystring);
$moditem = str_replace(?,_,$mystring);
$moditem =
Perhaps, ereg_replace(your regex, replacement_string, String
$variable).
Regards,
Shreyas
On Tue, Jun 22, 2010 at 9:10 PM, Rick Dwyer rpdw...@earthlink.net wrote:
Hello List.
I need to remove characters from a string and replace them with and
underscore.
So instead of having something
On 22 June 2010 16:44, Ashley Sheridan a...@ashleysheridan.co.uk wrote:
On Tue, 2010-06-22 at 11:40 -0400, Rick Dwyer wrote:
Hello List.
I need to remove characters from a string and replace them with and
underscore.
So instead of having something like:
$moditem =
On Tue, Jun 22, 2010 at 9:40 AM, Rick Dwyer rpdw...@earthlink.net wrote:
Hello List.
I need to remove characters from a string and replace them with and
underscore.
So instead of having something like:
$moditem = str_replace(--,_,$mystring);
$moditem = str_replace(?,_,$mystring);
Then, when does one use ereg_replace as against preg_replace? I read from
one the forums that preg_* is faster and ereg_* is if not faster but
simpler.
Is that it?
Regards,
Shreyas
On Tue, Jun 22, 2010 at 9:58 PM, Richard Quadling rquadl...@gmail.comwrote:
A word character is any letter or
Thanks to everyone who responded.
Regarding the myriad of choices, isn't Ashley's, listed below, the one
most like to guarantee the cleanest output of just letters and numbers?
--Rick
On Jun 22, 2010, at 11:44 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Tue, 2010-06-22 at 11:40 -0400, Rick Dwyer
On Tue, 2010-06-22 at 13:35 -0400, Rick Dwyer wrote:
Thanks to everyone who responded.
Regarding the myriad of choices, isn't Ashley's, listed below, the one
most like to guarantee the cleanest output of just letters and numbers?
--Rick
On Jun 22, 2010, at 11:44 AM, Ashley
Shreyas Agasthya wrote:
Then, when does one use ereg_replace as against preg_replace? I read from
one the forums that preg_* is faster and ereg_* is if not faster but
simpler.
BUT, all the ereg_* has been depricated. DO NOT USE THEM if you want your code
to work in the future. :)
Is that
Hello again list.
My code for stripping characters is below. I'm hoping to get feedback
as to how rock solid it will provide the desired output under any
circumstance:
My output must look like this (no quotes):
This-is-my-string-with-lots-of-junk-characters-in-it
The code with string
On Tue, 2010-06-22 at 20:03 -0400, Rick Dwyer wrote:
Hello again list.
My code for stripping characters is below. I'm hoping to get feedback
as to how rock solid it will provide the desired output under any
circumstance:
My output must look like this (no quotes):
Very good.
Thank you.
--Rick
On Jun 22, 2010, at 8:14 PM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Tue, 2010-06-22 at 20:03 -0400, Rick Dwyer wrote:
Hello again list.
My code for stripping characters is below. I'm hoping to get
feedback
as to how rock solid it will provide the desired output under
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 3:56 PM, Adam Williams
adam_willi...@bellsouth.netwrote:
I'm querying data and have results such as a variable named
$entries[$i][dn]:
CN=NTPRTPS3-LANIER-LD335c-LH107-PPRNP9A92,OU=XXf,OU=XX,OU=X,DC=,DC=xx,DC=xxx
Basically
On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 3:08 AM, Adam Richardson simples...@gmail.comwrote:
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 3:56 PM, Adam Williams
adam_willi...@bellsouth.net wrote:
I'm querying data and have results such as a variable named
$entries[$i][dn]:
On Fri, 2010-06-18 at 15:03 -0500, Adam wrote:
I'm querying data and have results such as a variable named
$entries[$i][dn]:
CN=NTPRTPS3-LANIER-LD335c-LH107-PPRNP9A92,OU=XXf,OU=XX,OU=X,DC=,DC=xx,DC=xxx
Basically I need to strip off the
On Sat, 2010-06-19 at 10:09 +0100, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Fri, 2010-06-18 at 15:03 -0500, Adam wrote:
I'm querying data and have results such as a variable named
$entries[$i][dn]:
On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 05:09, Ashley Sheridan a...@ashleysheridan.co.uk
wrote:
A substring() a strpos() should do the trick:
Echo echo
[sprintf()]
--
/Daniel P. Brown
URGENT:
EXTENDED TO SATURDAY, 19 JUNE: $100 OFF
YOUR FIRST MONTH, FREE CPANEL FOR LIFE
ON ANY NEW
On 6/19/2010 3:08 AM, Adam Richardson wrote:
$before_needle = true
Requires 5.3
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Adam Williams wrote:
I'm querying data and have results such as a variable named
$entries[$i][dn]:
CN=NTPRTPS3-LANIER-LD335c-LH107-PPRNP9A92,OU=XXf,OU=XX,OU=X,DC=,DC=xx,DC=xxx
Basically I need to strip off the first command everything after, so
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 15:56, Adam Williams
adam_willi...@bellsouth.net wrote:
I'm querying data and have results such as a variable named
$entries[$i][dn]:
CN=NTPRTPS3-LANIER-LD335c-LH107-PPRNP9A92,OU=XXf,OU=XX,OU=X,DC=,DC=xx,DC=xxx
Basically I
On Wed, September 20, 2006 7:13 pm, Christopher Watson wrote:
I've been coding with PHP for maybe a year. So I'm somewhat new to
it. But I've learned quickly, and created a fairly serious LAMP app
that is capable of returning large query results. During my
investigation into various means
Cannot compression be set in .htaccess?
Or even within the script???
I suspect you could even find a PHP class out there to compress and
send the right headers to do it all in PHP, regardless of server
settings...
On Wed, September 20, 2006 7:33 pm, Christopher Watson wrote:
Hi Robert,
Well,
Thanks for the follow-up Richard. I am now bracketing my Fusebox core
includes with ob_start(ob_gzhandler) and ob_end_flush(). It's done
wonders for those large query results. And since there is absolutely
nothing in this app that relies on multiple contiguous whitespace
characters, I'm good
On Wed, 2006-09-20 at 17:13 -0700, Christopher Watson wrote:
I've been coding with PHP for maybe a year. So I'm somewhat new to
it. But I've learned quickly, and created a fairly serious LAMP app
that is capable of returning large query results. During my
investigation into various means
On Wed, 2006-09-20 at 20:21 -0400, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2006-09-20 at 17:13 -0700, Christopher Watson wrote:
I've been coding with PHP for maybe a year. So I'm somewhat new to
it. But I've learned quickly, and created a fairly serious LAMP app
that is capable of returning large
Hi Robert,
Well, I think the main reason I'm not using transparent output
compression is because this app shares php.ini with several other PHP
apps on the server, and I don't want to foist this change on the
admins of those apps. I was trying to come up with a localized
strategy for trimming
On Wed, 2006-09-20 at 17:33 -0700, Christopher Watson wrote:
Hi Robert,
Well, I think the main reason I'm not using transparent output
compression is because this app shares php.ini with several other PHP
apps on the server, and I don't want to foist this change on the
admins of those apps.
Bingo! That's the ticket. Thanks, Robert.
-Christopher
On 9/20/06, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Why settle for 30% speed boost when you can get 90% ...
http://ca3.php.net/manual/en/function.ob-gzhandler.php
:)
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To
On 09/04/06, Winfried Meining [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I am writing on a script that parses a PHP script and finds all function calls
to check, if these functions exist. To do this, I needed a function that would
strip out all text, which is enclosed in apostrophes or quotation marks.
Have you considered running php -s from the command line, which syntax
highlights your source file for you, the searching for whatever color
codes in your php.ini are used for functions?
For that matter, you could custom-code the choices for the color and
make the functions read in a separate
http://www.phpcompiler.org/
Satyam
- Original Message -
From: Winfried Meining [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: php-general@lists.php.net
Sent: Sunday, April 09, 2006 10:20 PM
Subject: [PHP] stripping enclosed text from PHP code
Hi,
I am writing on a script that parses a PHP script and
Philip Hallstrom wrote:
Hello All,
I'm having some issues with carriage returns. Specifically the control M
character (^M). I have attempted to clean and validate the file I'm
creating. Here's the code.
while ($row = mysql_fetch_array($result)){
// assign and clean vars
$artist =
Hello All,
I'm having some issues with carriage returns. Specifically the control M
character (^M). I have attempted to clean and validate the file I'm
creating. Here's the code.
while ($row = mysql_fetch_array($result)){
// assign and clean vars
$artist = trim($row[artist]);
$tdDate
Your RegEx is probably fine...
But you are probably missing a closing quote in lines BEFORE line 39, and
PHP thinks everything up the the =^ is still part of some giant
monster long string that spans multiple lines, and then it gets to the
/head bit (because your opening quote is really a
On 6/7/05, Richard Lynch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Your RegEx is probably fine...
But you are probably missing a closing quote in lines BEFORE line 39, and
PHP thinks everything up the the =^ is still part of some giant
monster long string that spans multiple lines, and then it gets to
Dotan Cohen wrote:
I took this example from php.net, but can't figure out where I went
wrong. Why does this:
$text = preg_replace(/head(.|\s)*?(.|\s)*?\/head/i , , $text);
throw this error:
syntax error at line 265, column 39:
$text = preg_replace(/head(.|\s)*?(.|\s)*?\/head/i
On 6/5/05, Marek Kilimajer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dotan Cohen wrote:
I took this example from php.net, but can't figure out where I went
wrong. Why does this:
$text = preg_replace(/head(.|\s)*?(.|\s)*?\/head/i , , $text);
throw this error:
syntax error at line 265, column 39:
On Sun, June 5, 2005 7:05 am, Dotan Cohen said:
I took this example from php.net, but can't figure out where I went
wrong. Why does this:
$text = preg_replace(/head(.|\s)*?(.|\s)*?\/head/i , , $text);
throw this error:
syntax error at line 265, column 39:
$text =
On 6/6/05, Richard Lynch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, June 5, 2005 7:05 am, Dotan Cohen said:
I took this example from php.net, but can't figure out where I went
wrong. Why does this:
$text = preg_replace(/head(.|\s)*?(.|\s)*?\/head/i , , $text);
throw this error:
syntax error at
$recipients = '[EMAIL PROTECTED],[EMAIL PROTECTED],[EMAIL PROTECTED],';
echo str_replace(',', ', ', substr($recipients, 0, -1));
- Original Message -
From: Ross [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I have a large group of email addesses serperated by commas. I need to
trim
off the very last comma
use substr($recipients,0,1);
to remove the last char
and ereg_replace(,, ,,$recipients);
to add the spaces
Hope this helps
CK
On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 12:05:42PM +0100, Ross wrote:
I have a large group of email addesses serperated by commas. I need to trim
off the very last comma
On Mon, April 18, 2005 5:11 am, Chris Kay said:
use substr($recipients,0,1);
to remove the last char
and ereg_replace(,, ,,$recipients);
to add the spaces
If the list is *REALLY* large, http://php.net/str_replace might be a bit
faster.
For sure, there's no need to haul out the Ereg
unsigned does not equal absolute value.
$num = -40;
print Num: $num\n;
$num = abs($num);
print ABS: $num\n;
will display:
Num: -40
ABS: 40
http://us2.php.net/manual/en/function.abs.php
Justin
- Original Message -
From: Roger Thomas [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: php-general@lists.php.net
Sent:
I believe this is because taking a value and displaying it as an unsigned value
isn't the same as displaying the absolute value of a number.
Ever take a calculator that does hex and decimal, enter a negative number then
convert it to hex? There's no negative in hex, so you end up with
On Thursday 23 December 2004 16:18, Roger Thomas wrote:
I want to convert negative number to its positive equivalent.
$num = -40;
printf(Unsigned value is %u, $num);
output is: Unsigned value is 4294967256
I have checked the manpages and %u seems the right format. Pls advise.
You've
Adam,
Hi, I use a piece of proprietary software at work that uses weird session
ID strings in the URL. A sample URL looks like:
http://zed2.mdah.state.ms.us/F/CC8V7H1JF4LNBVP5KARL4KGE8AHIKP1I72JSBG6AYQSMK8YF4Y-01471?func=find-b-0
The weird session ID string changes each time you login.
Hello Dustin,
Monday, March 15, 2004, 2:45:06 PM, you wrote:
DW I need to post to a login script, then once the page is processed, I will
DW parsed the returned page for the data after logined. any help please?
One word for you: snoopy
Oh and one URL too: http://snoopy.sourceforge.com
It will
Joseph Szobody wrote:
Folks,
I'm taking some user input, and creating a folder on the server. I'm already
replacing with _, and stripping out a few known illegal characters (',
, /, \, etc). I need to be sure that I'm stripping out every character that
cannot be used for a folder name. What's
* Thus wrote Sophie Mattoug ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
Joseph Szobody wrote:
I'm taking some user input, and creating a folder on the server. I'm
already
replacing with _, and stripping out a few known illegal characters
(',
, /, \, etc). I need to be sure that I'm stripping out every
Sorry for the reply to the reply, but OExpress won't let me reply to
newsgroup posts...
From: Sophie Mattoug [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Joseph Szobody wrote:
I'm taking some user input, and creating a folder on the server. I'm
already
replacing with _, and stripping out a few known illegal characters
[snip]
Sorry for the reply to the reply, but OExpress won't let me reply to
newsgroup posts...
[/snip]
Had to laugh... :)
AND BTW Happy Thanksgiving to all of our folks who celebrate that
holiday!
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On Thursday, November 27, 2003, at 03:12 AM, Curt Zirzow wrote:
I'd approach it the same way.
preg_replace('/[^A-Za-z0-9_]/', '_', $dirname);
I totally agree with Curt here.
Justin French
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PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
[snip]
I currently use number_format() and str_replace() to remove a , or
$
if entered and reformat it as a price for an item. I've asked the
user not to use decimals but some still do. How do I remove a decimal
and
anything after from a number in a varable?
[/snip]
http://www.php.net/explode
From: Ed Curtis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I currently use number_format() and str_replace() to remove a , or $
if entered and reformat it as a price for an item. I've asked the
user not to use decimals but some still do. How do I remove a decimal and
anything after from a number in a varable?
Thanks! Works like a charm.
Ed
On Tue, 4 Nov 2003, CPT John W. Holmes wrote:
From: Ed Curtis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I currently use number_format() and str_replace() to remove a , or $
if entered and reformat it as a price for an item. I've asked the
user not to use decimals but some
On Sun, Oct 05, 2003 at 04:46:16AM -0400, zzz wrote:
:
: I'm trying to strip comments out of my code. I can get it to strip one
: section of comments but the problem comes in when I have more then one
: comment section to strip.
:
: I am using this: $code = preg_replace('/\/*(.*?)*\//is', '$1',
You will run into more problems and there are many things you need to
consider, for example /* in a string. But token_get_all() will parse
php code for you and will make things much simpler.
zzz wrote:
I'm trying to strip comments out of my code. I can get it to strip one
section of comments
Hey perfect Eugene, thanks
-Original Message-
From: Eugene Lee [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: October 5, 2003 5:14 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] stripping comments
On Sun, Oct 05, 2003 at 04:46:16AM -0400, zzz wrote:
:
: I'm trying to strip comments out of my code. I
On Sun, 5 Oct 2003 04:46:16 -0400, you wrote:
I'm trying to strip comments out of my code. I can get it to strip one
section of comments but the problem comes in when I have more then one
comment section to strip.
I am using this: $code = preg_replace('/\/*(.*?)*\//is', '$1', $code) and
need
Matt Babineau mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
on Tuesday, August 19, 2003 8:10 AM said:
Does anyone have a function or something they have already written to
remove any URL hacking characters, mainly the single quote, but I'm
looking for a nice function to filter my _GET variables against. Gotta
From: Matt Babineau [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Does anyone have a function or something they have already written to
remove any URL hacking characters, mainly the single quote, but I'm
looking for a nice function to filter my _GET variables against. Gotta
protect the database...ya know :)
Just escape
How to remove new line / CrLf from a string
http://examples.weberdev.com/get_example.php3?count=3577
Sincerely
berber
Visit http://www.weberdev.com/ Today!!!
To see where PHP might take you tomorrow.
-Original Message-
From: Charles Kline [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, June
Yes. Is weird. I thought this would work too, but for some reason it
was not removing them all. I wonder if re-saving the files with UNIX
linebreaks (or try DOS) would have any effect. Will report back.
- Charles
On Monday, June 9, 2003, at 02:24 AM, Joe Pemberton wrote:
On Sun, 2003-06-08 at 22:44, Charles Kline wrote:
Hi all,
How would i go about stripping all newlines from a string?
Thanks,
Charles
Something like this:
?php
error_reporting(E_ALL);
$str = This string has unix\n and Windows\r\n and Mac\r line endings.;
$new_str =
On Mon, 9 Jun 2003, Charles Kline wrote:
Yes. Is weird. I thought this would work too, but for some reason it
was not removing them all. I wonder if re-saving the files with UNIX
linebreaks (or try DOS) would have any effect. Will report back.
$str = str_replace (array(\r, \n), '', $str);
I am inserting data from a form into a mySQL database. I am using
addslashes to escape things like ' in the data input (this is actually
being done in PEAR (HTML_QuickForm).
The weird thing is that the data gets written into the table like:
what\'s your problem?
WITH the slash. I am not
John,
You are right, something was adding the additional slash. I removed the
addslashes() and it fixed the problem. Something I am doing must
already be handling that... will step through the code AGAIN and see if
I can find it.
- Charles
On Monday, March 17, 2003, at 12:19 PM, John W.
if Magic_quotes_gpc in you php.ini is set to 'on', php will automatically
escape(add slashes) for you.
Foong
Charles Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
John,
You are right, something was adding the additional slash. I removed the
addslashes() and it fixed the
Try these:
http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.urldecode.php
http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.rawurldecode.php
HTH,
Jason k Larson
Sarah Gray wrote:
Hello,
Forgive me if this is an obvious question, but I am passing a value (a
string with spaces and quotations) back in a query string
Sarah,
There are a couple functions that could do this for you.
Probably the fastest one for your example would be as follows.
$NewString = str_replace('%20', ' ', $value); // Removes the %20
characters
$NewString = str_replace '\', '', $NewString); // Removes \ character
echo $NewString;
on 21/11/02 2:25 AM, David Russell ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
strip_tags($_POST['Duplicate'], 'B I P A LI OL UL EM
BR TT STRONG BLOCKQUOTE DIV ECODE ');
OK, so this is cool. I got this list from the Slashdot allowed tags
list, which I would assume is ok.
Whoa there... NEVER assume because
I was wondering is there a way to strip ONLY the tags that you specify
from
a page, rather than having to include all the tags you do want (using
strip_tags() )
A regular expression or str_replace() would be best for this.
Realize this isn't a good method, though. What if you're trying to
That's what I thought the answer would be. I guess I will have to see
if I
can create a function to add to the next release of PHP to do this, as
there
certainly seems to be quite a demand for it, according to the archives
anyway.
I hope not. That would be a worthless function to have. Did
on 20/09/02 1:14 PM, John Holmes ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
I hope not. That would be a worthless function to have. Did you read my
post? The basic idea is validation is to allow what you _know_ is good,
and kill the rest. You don't kill a couple things you know are bad, then
assume the rest
On Thu, Jun 06, 2002 at 12:47:57PM +0100, Daniel Pupius wrote:
Hi there. I'm working with RDF/XML that is strict on what characters are
allowed within the elements and attributes. I was wondering if anyone had a
script that processed a string and replaced all illegal-characters with
their
Thanks, I've created a delimited file of all the HTML Character references.
I then loop through and do a replace as previously suggested. However,
IE's XML Parser still doesn't like the eacute; which represents é
For all intents and purposes it's ok and works with the RDF processor.
However,
Heya:
On Thu, Jun 06, 2002 at 04:54:15PM +0100, Daniel Pupius wrote:
Thanks, I've created a delimited file of all the HTML Character references.
I then loop through and do a replace as previously suggested. However,
IE's XML Parser still doesn't like the eacute; which represents é
For
Clarification:
So really, what you want to achieve is to ONLY have the email address?
I'm POSITIVE there's a better way with ereg_replace(), but I haven't got
time to experiment, and i'm no expert :)
So, what I figured was that you would loop through the $email, and if the
first char wasn't a ,
Use
$aFile=file(FILENAME);
//$aFile[0] contains the unwanted line
echo $aFile[1]; // displays line 2
echo $aFile[n]; // displays line n where n is an positieve interger and not
greater then the number of lines in the file
http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.file.php
HTH
Jerry
Thank you! Works. I have a few more questions! I am working on
converting a program from perl to PHP as it is the new language of choice
at our office.
I have been using printf statements in perl to format data. Is there a
similar funtion in php? Here is an example from the perl program:
, 2002 4:22 PM
To: Jerry Verhoef (UGBI)
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PHP] Stripping the first line of a file
Thank you! Works. I have a few more questions! I am working on
converting a program from perl to PHP as it is the new
language of choice
at our office.
I have been using
printf NEW (%-193.193s);
printf (%-193.193s,VARIABLE);
HTH
-Original Message-
From: Jerry Verhoef (UGBI) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, February 08, 2002 4:35 PM
To: 'Scott'; Jerry Verhoef (UGBI)
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PHP] Stripping the first line
Thanks Jerry!
In perl I was doing this:
printf NEW (%-193.193s);
Which I just read the manual and discovered it works in PHP as well.
Basically prints 193 spaces to make sure the line is 255 after I filled
the line with other characters.
On Fri, 8 Feb 2002, Jerry Verhoef (UGBI) wrote:
Addslashes() is probably getting called twice on the data on the insert...
if you have magic_gpc on, any inputted data already has the necessary escapes
- so you shouldnt need to call it again...
Hope that helped :)
--
Shane
On Saturday 01 Dec 2001 1:14 pm, Daniel Alsén wrote:
Hi,
i know
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, 28 July 2001 2:15 PM
To: Matt Stone
Cc: PHP list
Subject: Re: [PHP] Stripping single quotes
Matt,
Try ereg_replace:-
$fldemail == ereg_replace(',,$fldemail);
Chris
Matt Stone wrote:
Hi all,
I am trying to validate some email addresses before
:15 PM
To: Matt Stone
Cc: PHP list
Subject: Re: [PHP] Stripping single quotes
Matt,
Try ereg_replace:-
$fldemail == ereg_replace(',,$fldemail);
Chris
Matt Stone wrote:
Hi all,
I am trying to validate some email addresses before they are entered into
the database
Thanks for your help everyone, I feel pretty embarrassed to have made a
mistake like that! :o
-Original Message-
From: Bojan Gajic [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, 29 July 2001 12:44 AM
To: Matt Stone
Subject: Re: [PHP] Stripping single quotes
you are not assigning
Hi Brian,
* Persuade someone at Zend to modify PHP so that a filter function can
be specified which all output text is passed through - would have the
same restrictions as the header function
You can already achieve this by using the built-in output buffering
function. Read
astray from them, else we know the headaches us developers can face in the
future.
Sincerely,
Navid Yar
-Original Message-
From: Maxim Maletsky [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 1:06 AM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PHP] stripping
Hi Maxim,
1. HTTP compression, which is not 100% compatible, but catches most
of the browsers anyway.
Yes. The standard PHP implementation actually inspects the HTTP headers to
determine if the browser supports gzip encoding. If not, it will send the
files uncompressed. Looking at our website
]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 6:07 PM
To: Maxim Maletsky; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] stripping white space?
Hi Maxim,
I am definitely interested in seeing your caching modules - it could be
a
useful resource for ours.
Right now our caching module is only in the planning stage
Hi Remo,
PS: Can anyone enlighten me concerning HTTP compression?
I wish I could remember where I read this, but the PHP documentation still
does not have this feature described. To enable zlib output compression,
first make sure you have compiled PHP with the --with-zlib option. Next, add
the
: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 9:52 AM
To: Maxim Maletsky; 'Bart Veldhuizen'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] stripping white space?
On Tuesday 10 July 2001 11:26, Maxim Maletsky wrote:
But you're right, on UNIX systems, if I am not wrong, you cannot hold
more then 1024 (?) files in a single
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