I am trying to have a file that I generated with PHP saved as UTF-8 without the
BOM (Byte Order Mark). Does PHP do anything like this? I am a beginner with
PHP, but very technically experienced otherwise. I'm talking about the FILE
encoding here -just to be clear.
e.g. fopen("what_ever_file",
I am trying to have a file that I generated with PHP saved as UTF-8 without
the BOM (Byte Order Mark). Does PHP do anything like this? I am a beginner
with PHP, but very technically experienced otherwise. I'm talking about the
FILE encoding here -just to be clear.
e.g. fopen("what_ever_file",
I am trying to have a file that I generated with PHP saved as UTF-8 without
the BOM (Byte Order Mark). Does PHP do anything like this? I am a beginner
with PHP, but very technically experienced otherwise. I'm talking about the
FILE encoding here -just to be clear.
e.g. fopen("what_ever_file",
"Richard Lynch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Thu, April 21, 2005 5:07 pm, Jon M. said:
>> I am trying to have a file that I generated with PHP saved as UTF-8
>> without
>> the BOM (Byte Order Mark). Does PHP do anything l
xt that is saved in the file?
"Rasmus Lerdorf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Jon M. wrote:
>> "Richard Lynch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>>>On Thu, April 21, 2005
ime in the future! :) And hopefully I
am right about what I said above, and not flaunting my ignorance once
again -lol
Thanks again, to everyone who helped me! You guys really got me on the right
track. Not the least of which was simply causing me to think about what I
was asking more deeply.
-Jo
to be relevant anymore. Still, it is nice to have a
program -like I do- that has that flexibility.
-Jon
"Richard Lynch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Thu, April 28, 2005 4:14 am, Jon M. said:
>> No matter what I do to the strings to
I know in JavaScript, that you declare vars like so:
var = variableName;
So I'm assuming that in PHP you do it like this:
var = $variableName;
But there doesn't seem to be a single shred of documentation on PHP.net (or
in ANY book) that covers this. All they say is that it's good pract
I know it's not necessary, but I still want to know how.
I know in JavaScript, that you declare vars like so:
var = variableName;
So I'm assuming that in PHP you do it like this:
var = $variableName;
But there doesn't seem to be a single shred of documentation on PHP.net (or
in ANY book) tha
Name;
in PHP??? Would it be ignored? Or would it screw up the interpreter?
"Rasmus Lerdorf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Jon M. wrote:
>> I know in JavaScript, that you declare vars like so:
>>
>> var = variableName;
&
ED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi
On 5/5/05, Jon M. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I know in JavaScript, that you declare vars like so:
>
> var = variableName;
>
> So I'm assuming that in PHP you do it like this:
>
> var = $variableName;
I think y
erdorf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Jon M. wrote:
>> So, are you saying that it is absolutely "PHP-illegal" to do:
>
> Yes, it is illegal. Inside a class definition you can define properties
> like this, but for regular vari
ever seen! Thank you VERY much
for taking the time to write that, I am the kind of person who wants to
completely understand a subject (not just "how", but, "why" as well), and
now I completely understand this particular part of PHP.
-Jon
"Ryan Faricy" &
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