Jean-Michel Philippon-Nadeau wrote:
> Dear Tedd, Dear List,
>
> tedd wrote:
>> As for being "hung-up" -- again, I'm clueless. I mistakenly thought
>> that anything obtained from the browser was subject to suspicion as is
>> any outside data. But apparently you can "trust" (I realize within
>> cert
tedd wrote:
> At 3:01 PM +0100 11/28/07, Jochem Maas wrote:
...
> Jochem:
>
> This just hasn't been my week -- everyone (long story) thinks I'm being
> sarcastic when I'm not.
ouch!
>
> The "Sorry, my bad" means "I apologize, my mistake." How can that be
> taken as sarcasm?
guess it's down t
Dear Tedd, Dear List,
tedd wrote:
As for being "hung-up" -- again, I'm clueless. I mistakenly thought that
anything obtained from the browser was subject to suspicion as is any
outside data. But apparently you can "trust" (I realize within certain
limits) some things provided by the browser --
Jeff Benetti wrote:
...
> Am I correct that if two people are logged on using two different languages
> that the session var will keep track of the different users (by IP I assume)
> and the server won’t mess up?
yes, the contents of $_SESSION are stored per user. this is tracked by way of a
ses
At 3:01 PM +0100 11/28/07, Jochem Maas wrote:
tedd wrote:
> So, sniffing the browser to determine language isn't the same as browser
sniffing -- OK.
there is no sniffing of the browser - merely a case of parsing the contents of
the Accept-Language header if the browser sent it along with the
tedd wrote:
> At 12:56 AM +0100 11/28/07, Jochem Maas wrote:
>> Colin Guthrie wrote:
>>> tedd wrote:
>>
>> ...
>>
>> >
>> > Sorry Tedd, but I'm not sure where the browser sniffing stuff came in.
>>> IE and FF both offer a UI to input the user's preferred language, it's
>>> an HTTP standard thi
At 12:56 AM +0100 11/28/07, Jochem Maas wrote:
Colin Guthrie wrote:
tedd wrote:
...
>
> Sorry Tedd, but I'm not sure where the browser sniffing stuff came in.
IE and FF both offer a UI to input the user's preferred language, it's
an HTTP standard thing and nothign to do with user agents
Colin Guthrie wrote:
> tedd wrote:
...
>
> Sorry Tedd, but I'm not sure where the browser sniffing stuff came in.
> IE and FF both offer a UI to input the user's preferred language, it's
> an HTTP standard thing and nothign to do with user agents string
> parsing. It uses the Accept-Language hea
My approach to multi lang abilities uses the following db structure
base_name is the input field name and the basic raw label for the field
lang_1
lang_2
...
lang_12
prompt_1
prompt_2
...
prompt_12
since i currently need to support 12 languages in the initial concept
when the user signs
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