php-general Digest 10 Feb 2007 23:01:36 - Issue 4619
Topics (messages 248702 through 248717):
Re: JS prompt - php [become 0T]
248702 by: Ryan A
248706 by: Colin Guthrie
Any Internal search engine in PHP?
248703 by: Chris Carter
248707 by: Jay Blanchard
Jon Anderson wrote:
Fletcher Mattox wrote:
In terms of the behavior, I think it makes total sense. The only case
where it would ever bite you is yours (which is rare because most
people wouldn't mix perl and PHP in the same system).
I'm not going to get into the middle of the base64
Hey Colin,
Thanks for replying.
I guess this has sidelined from php a bit now... so have added a OT in the
subject line.
Anyway, this is how I get the values from a select or a text box:
var selectBox = document.forms[0].lang;user_input =
Hi,
I had been trying some search engines for internal searches within my
website. I tried google co-op which failed as the results were showing on
supplemental index. The one provided by cpanel does not show more than 2-3
URLs in results. Please advice if you know about any php based search
Hi,
I am now mulling over writing my PHP web application from scratch or to use
some kind of framework to organize my code.
For Java, Struts and Spring come to mind. But for PHP, there are numerous
frameworks and I can't figure out which one to use.
I would like to describe my constraints as
Most frameworks rely on a dtabase, but have a look at this:
http://toys.lerdorf.com/archives/38-The-no-framework-PHP-MVC-framework.html
Ryan A wrote:
Hey Colin,
Thanks for replying.
I guess this has sidelined from php a bit now... so have added a OT in the
subject line.
Anyway, this is how I get the values from a select or a text box:
var selectBox = document.forms[0].lang;user_input =
[snip]
I had been trying some search engines for internal searches within my
website. I tried google co-op which failed as the results were showing
on
supplemental index. The one provided by cpanel does not show more than
2-3
URLs in results. Please advice if you know about any php based search
At 2:19 PM -0500 2/9/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
Yes, of course. Maintaining such a site without rewriting urls would
be a nightmare. When I said that those sites are redirecting users,
I was thinking about response headers.
Why do you need to rewrite URLs?
Cheers,
Rob.
Forgive me,
Myron Turner wrote:
Jon Anderson wrote:
Fletcher Mattox wrote:
In terms of the behavior, I think it makes total sense. The only case
where it would ever bite you is yours (which is rare because most
people wouldn't mix perl and PHP in the same system).
I'm not going to get into the middle
At 4:39 AM -0800 2/10/07, Chris Carter wrote:
Hi,
I had been trying some search engines for internal searches within my
website. I tried google co-op which failed as the results were showing on
supplemental index. The one provided by cpanel does not show more than 2-3
URLs in results. Please
Hello,
on 02/09/2007 04:49 PM Manish Marathe said the following:
Hello,
I have seen some implementations of Server in php implementing HTTP Digest
Authentication but I have not seen any guidelines on HTTP Client connecting
to a specific host, and using the realm, the username and password
Hello,
on 02/08/2007 11:27 AM Ross said the following:
Does anyone know of a form validation class available that gives
(i) feedback in a graphical way like this (the ticks and crosses)
http://forums.oscommerce.com/index.php?act=Regcoppa_user=0termsread=1coppa_pass=1
Yes, you may want to
To all PHP experts,
Do any of you also know how to play bridge?
If yes, which do you think is harder to learn, PHP or bridge?
Thanks.
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What an odd question
Personally PHP makes much more sense to me then the many variations of
bridge...
?php
/*
Stephen Johnson c | eh
The Lone Coder
http://www.ouradoptionblog.com
Join our journey of adoption
http://www.thelonecoder.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
continuing the struggle against
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2007-02-10 13:19:02 -0800:
Do any of you also know how to play bridge?
If yes, which do you think is harder to learn, PHP or bridge?
I don't play bridge, but both things are languages. Presumably the one
with bigger grammar is more complicated. But syntax is just one
pub wrote:
which do you think is harder to learn, PHP or bridge?
Well, PHP *can* be a lot more complicated, but at least it's more or
less predictable, and I've RARELY had a bridge partner that played the
game predictably and consistently
kennM
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Robert Cummings writes:
But isn't the sender and receiver usually one and the same. I mean your
PHP application is usually what set the cookie in the first place. Then
you receive it in the very same PHP application.
No! Not in this case. The first sentence in my original message was:
Hi!
I was thinking about asking for recommendations for a lightweight database
class. But I realized I hadn't thought much about what my requirements are
so I decided instead to ask the list to critique my own class. I don't need
anything as robust as ADOdb and I always use MySQL.
This class
Having learned Bridge when I was younger, I feel PHP is alot easier to learn as
it is constant in a way.
Depending on cards you are holding, cards your partner is holding, and your
oponents bidding, depends how you should bid. Quite a bit of variablity in
there.
- Original Message
A month or so ago I can across a php based open source community news
package. I can't seem to find it now...does anyone know of one?
Thanks!
At 2/10/2007 01:19 PM, pub wrote:
Do any of you also know how to play bridge?
If yes, which do you think is harder to learn, PHP or bridge?
I don't think learning is so generalizable.
In my experience, motivation has a lot to do with how easy things are
to learn. If you're excited or
On Sat, 2007-02-10 at 17:01 -0600, Fletcher Mattox wrote:
Robert Cummings writes:
But isn't the sender and receiver usually one and the same. I mean your
PHP application is usually what set the cookie in the first place. Then
you receive it in the very same PHP application.
No! Not
Jon Anderson writes:
I won't argue that this behavior should probably be documented with
$_COOKIE, but it is documented with it's counterpart, setcookie: Note
that the value portion of the cookie will automatically be urlencoded
when you send the cookie, and when it is received, it is
Hello all;
Is there a way to un include a file once it has been included in a
script?
I have a situation where I need to include a php file for a variable and
its value. Then I need to open the file and modify it in the same
function
'that included the file. So far the function, as I test it
Maybe you could make a separate PHP file, include it there, then pass
the results to the main file?
On 2/10/07, jekillen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello all;
Is there a way to un include a file once it has been included in a
script?
I have a situation where I need to include a php file for a
You need to rearchitect your system.
When you include a file, its code executes. Once it has been executed, it is
done. It will never rewind itself. You can open and edit the file, but
the code has already executed and that execution has happened, and you cannot
change that.
What exactly
On Sat, 2007-02-10 at 09:47 -0500, tedd wrote:
I had been trying some search engines for internal searches within my
website. I tried google co-op which failed as the results were showing on
supplemental index. The one provided by cpanel does not show more than 2-3
URLs in results. Please
Goh Yong Kwang wrote:
Hi,
I am now mulling over writing my PHP web application from scratch or to use
some kind of framework to organize my code.
For Java, Struts and Spring come to mind. But for PHP, there are numerous
frameworks and I can't figure out which one to use.
I would like to
First time this went through I got a message saying I had to confirm my
address. I did that but I never saw it show up on the list so I'm trying
again.
-- Forwarded message --
From: barophobia [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Feb 10, 2007 2:12 PM
Subject: Please critique my database
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