On Wed, 2006-01-18 at 16:20, Mark wrote:
> Robert Cummings wrote:
> >
> > The implementation is slightly more difficult than what I've just
> > described, but simple enough :)
>
> It's truly ugly, don't you think?
Actually I find it quite elegant, but maybe that's just me :)
Cheers,
Rob.
--
.-
On Wed, January 18, 2006 2:36 pm, Mark wrote:
> Here's a point of debate, should this sort of behavior be allowed?
Of course it should be allowed!
It's a standard computer science technique!
There are entire branches of mathematics / science devoted to
recursive graph theory.
Whole *BOOKS* writ
Robert Cummings wrote:
> On Wed, 2006-01-18 at 15:36, Mark wrote:
>>
>> [-- CLIPPED --]
>>
>> Here's a point of debate, should this sort of behavior be allowed? If it
>> is allowable, how does one support it in any sort of serialized
>> methodology? I have a few ideas but none very pretty. I'm pre
On Wed, 2006-01-18 at 15:44, Robert Cummings wrote:
>
> Yes it should be allowed,
Actualy was just thinking about how I didn't allow this in JavaScript...
you might want to make it an option as a second parameter to recurse. I
know in JavaScript any DOM element references the entire DOM tree and
y
On Wed, 2006-01-18 at 15:36, Mark wrote:
>
> [-- CLIPPED --]
>
> Here's a point of debate, should this sort of behavior be allowed? If it is
> allowable, how does one support it in any sort of serialized methodology? I
> have a few ideas but none very pretty. I'm pretty sure it causes problems
> in
Vlad,
Try IMAGE
/bsh/
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Hi Yoed,
> mysql_query("SELECT Id, Dep_Date, Return_DateFROM X,Y WHERE Dep_Date LIKE
> '%$SelectDate%' OR Return_Date LIKE '%$SelectDate%' ORDER BY Dep_Date");
> Will give you a ton of errors, and I'm not very fimilar with JOIN and SQL
> and how that works. My idea was to create two querys, but t
It's obviously more effective to do it in MySQL, but you shouldn't have any real
processing problems even if you don't find an appropriate solution using MySQL
exclusively, because you'd have the two arrays ordered by MySQL, so all you'll
have to do would be something like
$myrow1=mysql_fetch_row
You can indeed do this in javascript. You need to put a FORM on the page in
the other frame and then access the data elements in that form with the
syntax
parent.frame[x].formname.elementname.value
or something along those lines.
This gets pretty ugly pretty quickly, IMO. Also, I think you coul
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