Ken Kixmoeller in php.general (Wed, 9 Jan 2013 14:25:33 -0600):
>I have searched for 2 days trying to find references for this. I see a lot
>of PHP-driven applications having the same problem (mostly blogs), but no
>"under the hood" fixes.
It might be a rewrite rule that rewrites to the original U
Could you run
curl --head -i --max-redirs 10 http://yoursite.com > headers.log
And paste the log here?
On Thu, Jan 10, 2013 at 2:25 AM, Ken Kixmoeller wrote:
> Hey, folks -
>
> One of my applications is being moved to a new server. Testing it out, I
> get the subject error. The error is
Hey, folks -
One of my applications is being moved to a new server. Testing it out, I
get the subject error. The error is reported this way in Chrome. In FireFox
it says:
"Firefox has detected that the server is redirecting the request for this
address in a way that will never complete."
I
On 9.1.2013 12:22, Arno Kuhl wrote:
Both %U and %W seem to return what you want, using strftime. I'd guess that
date would also have flags for these.
No. That's one thing I've wondered sometimes.
According to documentation:
strftime has:
Week--- ---
%U Week number of the given year,
On Tue, 8 Jan 2013, Arno Kuhl wrote:
> Starting with a unix timestamp for 31 December 2012 13:12:12 (which is
> 1356952332) I calculate a week number:
>
> $ux_date = 1356952332;
>
> $weeknumber = date("W", $ux_date); // returns 01 instead of 52
I'm not that familiar with date, I tend to use str
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