Hi everyone,
Thanks for all the great ideas and links.
Marc
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Am 16.02.12 22:37, schrieb Marc Guay:
> 2) The range of possibilities are broader than I indicated. They would
> like to be able to enter conditions of all sorts. i.e. ($x / $y) > 0.5
> (($a+$b+$c) / $d) < .75 etc. If you have any suggestions on how to
> increase the security while maintaning the f
On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 10:37 PM, Marc Guay wrote:
>> It shouldn't be that hard to parse this type of expressions.
>
> I appreciate your concern, and will do my best to validate the input,
> but there are two things:
>
> 1) The application will only be used by selected users.
> and
Even selected
On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 04:37:18PM -0500, Marc Guay wrote:
> > It shouldn't be that hard to parse this type of expressions.
>
> I appreciate your concern, and will do my best to validate the input,
> but there are two things:
>
> 1) The application will only be used by selected users.
> and
> 2)
> It shouldn't be that hard to parse this type of expressions.
I appreciate your concern, and will do my best to validate the input,
but there are two things:
1) The application will only be used by selected users.
and
2) The range of possibilities are broader than I indicated. They
would like
On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 9:49 PM, Marc Guay wrote:
>> I just added the return statement and the semicolon, because the error was
>> complaining about it not being a proper PHP statement basically.
>
> That's beautiful, thanks. I just stumbled across a forum post that
> said it wasn't possible and
> I just added the return statement and the semicolon, because the error was
> complaining about it not being a proper PHP statement basically.
That's beautiful, thanks. I just stumbled across a forum post that
said it wasn't possible and was about to give up for the day.
Marc
--
PHP General
On Thu, 2012-02-16 at 15:38 -0500, Marc Guay wrote:
> > It sounds like you have a string "$x < $y" in the database that you then
> > replace into a string "4 < 5" which you want to test a conditional on. If
> > this is the case, why are you storing conditionals in the database?
>
> The user will
> It sounds like you have a string "$x < $y" in the database that you then
> replace into a string "4 < 5" which you want to test a conditional on. If
> this is the case, why are you storing conditionals in the database?
The user will be able to construct their own query strings, it's
complicated
Can you explain a more clearly what it is you're trying to accomplish?
It sounds like you have a string "$x < $y" in the database that you then
replace into a string "4 < 5" which you want to test a conditional on. If this
is the case, why are you storing conditionals in the database?
Regards,
Hi folks,
I've constructed simple conditions based on DB data and would like to
actually evaluate them with PHP. For example, the coded string "$x <
$y" has been str_replaced into "4 < 5", but now I would actually like
to use that string in an if() statement. I tried eval() but got an
unhelpful
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