Which one is more active than others? I mean which project extends
faster and better, in future?
On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 1:37 AM, Philip Thompson wrote:
> On Dec 14, 2009, at 4:27 AM, Ali Asghar Toraby Parizy wrote:
>
>> Hi
>> I think the best choice is jquery until now.
>> But, is it reasonable
On 15 Dec 2009, at 08:50, Ali Asghar Toraby Parizy > wrote:
Which one is more active than others? I mean which project extends
faster and better, in future?
On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 1:37 AM, Philip Thompson > wrote:
On Dec 14, 2009, at 4:27 AM, Ali Asghar Toraby Parizy wrote:
Hi
I think the b
-- Forwarded message --
From: Randall Girard
Date: 2009/12/14
Subject: RE: [PHP] Re: ErrorException and set_exception_handler()
To: rquadl...@googlemail.com
I understood exactly what was going on in the code! (I'm no fool when
it comes to this) I just thought (logically) that if
This seems like a pretty basic question, but it has me stumped.
Here's my scenario: I'm using Douglas Crockford's JSON2.js to parse an
object in JavaScript, which I then pass to a PHP script to store in a
file. I use JSON.stringify() on the object, which logs to the console
as this:
{"employees":
Hi Guys & Gals,
I've been playing around with PHP 5.3 for a while now on development servers
and servers solely used for start-ups and lower-profile apps. But now I'm
about to upgrade the servers for a high profile/high traffic website and
with this upgrade I'd also like to make the switch from 5.
On Tue, 2009-12-15 at 02:53 +, Joseph Masoud wrote:
> On 14 Dec 2009, at 22:01, Ashley Sheridan
> wrote:
>
> > On Mon, 2009-12-14 at 15:59 -0600, Philip Thompson wrote:
> >
> >> On Dec 14, 2009, at 12:51 AM, Lester Caine wrote:
> >>
> >>> Lenin wrote:
> You might also like this:
> >>>
On Tue, 2009-12-15 at 06:52 -0500, Andrew Burgess wrote:
> This seems like a pretty basic question, but it has me stumped.
>
> Here's my scenario: I'm using Douglas Crockford's JSON2.js to parse an
> object in JavaScript, which I then pass to a PHP script to store in a
> file. I use JSON.stringif
-Original Message-
From: Ghodmode [mailto:ghodm...@ghodmode.com]
Sent: 15 December 2009 09:41 AM
To: php-general@lists.php.net
Subject: Re: [PHP] PHP live chat
I've played around with CraftySyntax LiveHelp, but I haven't deployed it
in a production environment. It definitely looks lik
http://www.livezilla.net/
-Mensagem original-
De: Angelo Zanetti [mailto:ang...@zlogic.co.za]
Enviada em: terça-feira, 15 de dezembro de 2009 09:59
Para: 'Ghodmode'; php-general@lists.php.net
Assunto: RE: [PHP] PHP live chat
-Original Message-
From: Ghodmode [mailto:ghodm...@gh
On Mon, Dec 14, 2009 at 6:43 PM, Ashley Sheridan
wrote:
> I'm looking for a way to strip HTML tags out of some text content
> (sourced from a web page) to leave just the text which I'll be running
> some basic analysis on. The thing is, I want to preserve text that is in
> alt and title attributes
Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> On Tue, 2009-12-15 at 06:52 -0500, Andrew Burgess wrote:
>
>> This seems like a pretty basic question, but it has me stumped.
>>
>> Here's my scenario: I'm using Douglas Crockford's JSON2.js to parse an
>> object in JavaScript, which I then pass to a PHP script to store in
I've had quite some luck using the html2text class by Jon Abernathy
http://www.chuggnutt.com/html2text.php
It's targetted to php 4, and rather old code - but it does the job for me.
Where the 'job for me' is converting html to text for when I'm sending out
emails in HTML format and want to off
>
>
> If you don't have access to do this, look at stripslashes()
>
And if you absolutely want to be on the safe side - check* if the
magic_quotes option is enabled - if so; do stripslashes. If not - then
obviously don't.
* http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.get-magic-quotes-gpc.php
>
>
> --
2009/10/16 Dotan Cohen :
It's called "vacation away from the 'net but there is an emergency". I'm
certain that a fair portion of the list is familiar with that!
>>>
>>> I haven't the slightest idea what you are talking about. Vacation? Away
>>> from the net? We must be from different plan
On Dec 14, 2009, at 8:47 PM, James McLean wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 10:03 AM, Philip Thompson
> wrote:
>> My head hurts from hitting it on my desk all day, so I thought I'd turn to a
>> fresher set of eyes. The issue I'm having is getting PHP to connect ODBC. I
>> can get it to work usin
2009/10/16 Dotan Cohen :
> How would you read this out loud if you were to read it to someone
> over the phone?
>
> ($item->getServiceId() ? $item->getServiceId() : $item->getId(;
>
> Thanks!
>
> --
> Dotan Cohen
>
> http://what-is-what.com
> http://gibberish.co.il
>
> --
> PHP General Mailing
On Dec 15, 2009, at 3:12 AM, Joseph Masoud wrote:
> On 15 Dec 2009, at 08:50, Ali Asghar Toraby Parizy
> wrote:
>
>> Which one is more active than others? I mean which project extends
>> faster and better, in future?
>>
>> On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 1:37 AM, Philip Thompson
>> wrote:
>>> On Dec
2009/12/14 Catherine Madsen :
> Hi Again,
>
> Following the suggestions I received from a earlier post, I've closed the
> statement
> while ($stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_BOUND))
> before $stmt = NULL;
> I don't get an error anymore, but still retrieve only one record.
>
> To check that the array was bei
2009/12/15 Philip Thompson :
> On Dec 14, 2009, at 8:47 PM, James McLean wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 10:03 AM, Philip Thompson
>> wrote:
>>> My head hurts from hitting it on my desk all day, so I thought I'd turn to
>>> a fresher set of eyes. The issue I'm having is getting PHP to connect
On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 12:03:23PM +, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>
> I've always been led to believe that you go with MySQL if you want
> speed, Oracle if you want data integrity. I know they both handle each
> one admirably, but Oracle is known more for guarding the data against
> mishaps and
2009/12/14 Ashley Sheridan
>
> On Mon, 2009-12-14 at 17:03 +0200, Cafer Şimşek wrote:
>
> René Fournier writes:
>
> > On 2009-12-14, at 10:44 PM, Cafer Şimşek wrote:
> >
> >> René Fournier writes:
> >>
> >>> 4.as per php.ini, allow_url_fopen On
> >>
> >> Look at from phpinfo() the settin
Thanks guys; I've got it working now!
On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 9:54 AM, Wouter van Vliet / Interpotential
wrote:
>>
>> If you don't have access to do this, look at stripslashes()
>
> And if you absolutely want to be on the safe side - check* if the
> magic_quotes option is enabled - if so; do stri
Ashley Sheridan wrote:
I'm looking for a way to strip HTML tags out of some text content
(sourced from a web page) to leave just the text which I'll be running
some basic analysis on. The thing is, I want to preserve text that is in
alt and title attributes. I can't use any DOM functions, as I
On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 6:44 AM, Wouter van Vliet / Interpotential
wrote:
> And if that doesn't suit your needs - you might want to take a look at this:
>
> http://sourceforge.net/projects/simplehtmldom/
+1
I've never used the html2text library, but simplehtmldom is very easy
to use and has wo
Hey all (and Nirmalya, thanks for the help!),
I have a question that I just can't seem to find via Google.
I want to be able to add messages to a qeue whenever my classes complete (or
fail to complete) specific functions. I think have a call within my html to
my Notifier class to print all qeued
Thank you so much for sending me in the right direction. I've
re-written the first part of the script using PDO statements and it
works great.
Catherine
Richard Quadling wrote:
2009/12/14 Catherine Madsen :
Hi Again,
Following the suggestions I received from a earlier post, I've closed
Allen McCabe wrote:
> Hey all (and Nirmalya, thanks for the help!),
>
>
> I have a question that I just can't seem to find via Google.
>
> I want to be able to add messages to a qeue whenever my classes complete (or
> fail to complete) specific functions. I think have a call within my html to
>
Allen,
The short answer (but don't follow this):
addToQ( .. );
}
}
?>
The long(er) answer:
I assume your Notifier object functions as singleton? Ie; accross your
entire application, there is only one instance of that class?
Why not go-static? That is, to my experience, the sweetest way to make
Wouter,
Implementing your static idea was pretty easy, I was already referencing
Notifier with the :: operator in my other methods, however I am running into
trouble assigning new values to the static array.
I am getting a "syntax error, unexpected '[' " on this line of my Notifier
class:
Notifi
Sorry, and then I didn't keep it on list :-(
Shawn McKenzie wrote:
> Please reply to the list. Just google for "php registry pattern". Here is a
> very basic example. There are better OOP people here than I.
>
> class Registry {
> protected $_objects = array();
>
> function set($name,
On 2009-12-15, at 11:55 PM, Richard Quadling wrote:
> Do you have a default stream context defined for the http stream?
Nope.
>
> A _LONG_ time ago, when I was using a firewall with NTLM
> authentication (which PHP doesn't deal with), I had to route all my
> calls through a local proxy.
>
> Th
On 2009-12-15, at 11:55 PM, Richard Quadling wrote:
> Do you have a default stream context defined for the http stream?
Nope.
>
> A _LONG_ time ago, when I was using a firewall with NTLM
> authentication (which PHP doesn't deal with), I had to route all my
> calls through a local proxy.
>
> Th
> I'm not sure if you can use CSS alone to highlight, but if you can, just
> give the area a class as you output it with PHP
That's the problem, area itself isn't visible, so giving a CSS class won't
highlight it.
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