On Jun 14, 2007, at 8:26 AM, Wade Preston Shearer wrote:

The issue isn't necessarily your file extension, though, that depends on how
your webserver is configured.  Some of mine will process files ending
in .html, .phtml, .xhtml, .xml and .php because I've configured them (those
webservers, that is) that way.

I've worked for a few companies that have even used custom extensions. One used the acronym of the company name.

That's annoying for text editors with extension-based syntax highlighting.

We use Apache Multiviews for internationalization, so we have index.php.en, index.php.es, index.php.pt, etc. and text editors usually can't recognize them as PHP files.






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