Yeah, you can't do the local computer file moving and all that with the same
script as your server side component, but if you'd rather not learn C# or
another language like that, but you're comfortable with PHP, I'd highly
recommend checking out Winbinder (http://www.winbinder.com). Assuming yo
Ok, but you're telling that the client will be doing upload to server. Not
the server doing a dounload from client. I was understood as a wrong way.
I'm sorry.
Robert Cummings wrote:
> PHP can do this, but you'd need it set up on each of the client
> computers and periodically run to check the te
PHP can do this, but you'd need it set up on each of the client
computers and periodically run to check the temp folder and perform the
upload. That's what any other application that can do similar does.
Cheers,
Rob.
On Mon, 2006-03-06 at 15:30, João Cândido de Souza Neto wrote:
> PHP don't do th
(Re-sending as I accidentally sent my original post directly to Al)
Al wrote:
> Mace Eliason wrote:
>
>> I really don't think this is possible from what I know of php, but I
>> thought I would as the experts.
>>
>> Is it possible to have php create directories and move files on a
>> local machine
Robert Cummings wrote:
>
> Justin French wrote:
> >
> > Yup, with "local host" you're not going to be able to access it from a
> > remote machine (although it's worth asking your host).
>
> Actually you can connect to a mySQL database from a remote server.
> You just need to make sure that permi
Or read the man page on mysql_pconnect/mysql_connect ?
-Original Message-
From: Jochem [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, May 13, 2002 9:25 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PHP] Re: Is This Possible? (Database - PHP)
Why don't you install Mysql on your local machine and do your
Justin French wrote:
>
> Yup, with "local host" you're not going to be able to access it from a
> remote machine (although it's worth asking your host).
Actually you can connect to a mySQL database from a remote server.
You just need to make sure that permissions are set up in the mysql
table to
Yup, with "local host" you're not going to be able to access it from a
remote machine (although it's worth asking your host).
Just set up a test machine locally which is as close as possible to what
your host runs (ie Unix, WinNT, whatever), with simular versions of PHP,
Apache, MySQL, etc etc...
Yes, it's entirely possible to abuse the PHP mailinglist
by sending MySQL tutorials and useless complaints like this one.
bvr.
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