At 12:42 PM +0200 8/20/07, Wouter van Vliet / Interpotential wrote:
Only thing I was trying to do was chip in my two cents. Again, I
wasn't the one who originally asked the question and I certainly am
not "friggen clueless".
Maybe not, but you made some pretty clueless remarks -- like if you
On 20/08/07, tedd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> At 10:40 PM +0200 8/19/07, Wouter van Vliet / Interpotential wrote:
> >What you're proposing, is to actually display some content on another
> page
> >then were the content is originally intended? I'm sorry, but I would
> >consider that 'bad practice
At 10:40 PM +0200 8/19/07, Wouter van Vliet / Interpotential wrote:
What you're proposing, is to actually display some content on another page
then were the content is originally intended? I'm sorry, but I would
consider that 'bad practice'. To me, it makes perfect sense that you don't
want to le
What you're proposing, is to actually display some content on another page
then were the content is originally intended? I'm sorry, but I would
consider that 'bad practice'. To me, it makes perfect sense that you don't
want to leave the user on the page where login was originally handled. For
vario
At 8:52 AM +0200 8/19/07, Otto Wyss wrote:
In my case I could easilly do without redirection but just exit and
fall back on the calling page. Yet I want to remove the login page
from the browser history. Does the header function have the same
effect?
O. Wyss:
Instead of messing with the us
M. Sokolewicz wrote:
emits). Now, I'm not going to go into how redirecting that way won't
work (or at least shouldn't), but a hint would be to do it properly
using header('Location: [...]') instead.
I'm aware that using Javascript within a PHP code block doesn't seems
logical yet I haven't know
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