Re: [PHP] HTTP Environment Varialbles

2001-12-06 Thread Andrey Hristov
noticed. Regards and best wishes, Andrey Hristov -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-==-=-=--=-= From: "Rasmus Lerdorf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Andrey Hristov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: "Alex Shi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Fr

Re: [PHP] HTTP Environment Varialbles

2001-12-06 Thread Rasmus Lerdorf
> var_dump($HTTP_SERVER_VARS); > var_dump($HTTP_POST_VARS); > var_dump($HTTP_GET_VARS); > var_dump($HTTP_COOKIE_VARS); > var_dump($HTTP_ENV_VARS); > > since 4.1.0 these are deprecated. Use > $_SERVER, $_POST, $_GET, $_COOKIE, $_ENV They are not deprecated. They will still work. $_* are slightl

Re: [PHP] HTTP Environment Varialbles

2001-12-06 Thread Andrey Hristov
t; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 12:41 AM Subject: [PHP] HTTP Environment Varialbles > Hi, > > I have a question about how we can read environment variables. In perl we > can > do this as following: > > $caller

[PHP] HTTP Environment Varialbles

2001-12-06 Thread Alex Shi
Hi, I have a question about how we can read environment variables. In perl we can do this as following: $caller = $ENV{'HTTP_REFERER'}; $doc_name = $ENV{'DOCUMENT_NAME'}; $visitor_ip = $ENV{'REMOTE_ADDR'}; $visitor_host = $ENV{'REMOTE_HOST'}; Actually in Perl, either SSI or CGI, we can get all