On Wed, June 14, 2006 12:37 pm, Alex Major wrote:
I've been (very slowly) working my way through some basic php, and
putting it into my html site. However recently (after trying things
out such
as cookies or redirects where they have to be set before any page
output)
I've found that the
On Thursday 15 June 2006 01:50, Richard Lynch wrote:
I can guarantee that somebody on this list is going to be agahst at
this recommendation of such a crude solution -- But it has served me
well for a decade for SIMPLE WEB APPLICATIONS and is much less effort
and more maintainable simply by
On Wed, June 14, 2006 3:28 pm, BBC wrote:
I used many functions as template to change the html syntax.
this is one of the function as a sample:
?php
function
tabletag($border=0,$width=100%,$height=100%,$cellpadding =
0,$cellspacing=0,$style=)
{
print (table width=\$width\ height
];
php-general@lists.php.net
Sent: Wednesday, June 14, 2006 5:39 PM
Subject: Re: [PHP] Using PHP/HTML effectivly
At 1:28 PM -0700 6/14/06, BBC wrote:
I used many functions as template to change the html syntax.
this is one of the function as a sample:
?php
function tabletag($border=0,$width=100
Richard Lynch wrote:
On Wed, June 14, 2006 3:28 pm, BBC wrote:
I used many functions as template to change the html syntax.
this is one of the function as a sample:
?php
function
tabletag($border=0,$width=100%,$height=100%,$cellpadding =
0,$cellspacing=0,$style=)
{
print (table
At 1:14 AM -0700 6/15/06, BBC wrote:
Thank Mr.tedd(I guess you are a man)
I think you should check one of my site http://aztec-indianart.com
while you're surfing this site actually you are visiting one page only with
different variable (see url).
I used many data in html, php, inc, txt, css,
On Thu, 2006-06-15 at 03:16, Larry Garfield wrote:
Another recommendation: Do not, under any circumstances, try to write your
own
template engine. All you'll be doing is writing a syntax parser in PHP for
another syntax that will give you fewer options, less flexibility, and worse
Robert Cummings wrote:
On Thu, 2006-06-15 at 03:16, Larry Garfield wrote:
Another recommendation: Do not, under any circumstances, try to write your
own
template engine. All you'll be doing is writing a syntax parser in PHP for
another syntax that will give you fewer options, less
Hi List,
I've been (very slowly) working my way through some basic php, and
putting it into my html site. However recently (after trying things out such
as cookies or redirects where they have to be set before any page output)
I've found that the combination or certainly the way that I'm using
I'm guessing that phpBB is doing things the right way.. that is, separating
presentation and logic. In cases like that, you have your PHP code and your
HTML in separate files with as little 'logic' in the HTML as possible.
I'm kind of oversimplifying the explaination and I'm sure there are
This is my opinion on the matter...
From experience, I would say that mixing PHP and HTML together in a
complicated page can often get very ugly. I prefer to separate out
presentation and code into separate layers as much as possible.
I have most often used template systems such as Smarty
: Wednesday, June 14, 2006 10:37 AM
Subject: [PHP] Using PHP/HTML effectivly
Hi List,
I've been (very slowly) working my way through some basic php, and
putting it into my html site. However recently (after trying things out
such
as cookies or redirects where they have to be set before any
Thankyou everyone who responded to my original message. All of your ideas
have showed me the various ways of doing it, however I believe that the idea
from Jons message is best suited to my needs. I realise the logic behind it,
its put together some knowledge I have already so I think I'll use it
At 1:28 PM -0700 6/14/06, BBC wrote:
I used many functions as template to change the html syntax.
this is one of the function as a sample:
?php
function tabletag($border=0,$width=100%,$height=100%,$cellpadding =
0,$cellspacing=0,$style=)
{
print (table width=\$width\ height =\$height\
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