Hey guys. Any insight into this problem im experiencing would be much appriciated...
I installed some software on my web space a while back, I ran a script and it
extracted some files from a tar ball I had uploaded. This was all designed to make
the package easy to install and set up. The id
Im looking to change my hosting provider.
...something that isnt going to break the bank, is feature full, supports mysql, php
etc etc and doesnt limit your bandwidth usage! I need about 100+ mb's of space, and
possibly the ability to run a background process.
Can anyone here suggest a good
If you dont mind downloading ~50 messages a day, then I'd recommend this
group :]
Regards
Matt.
- Original Message -
From: "Julie Hull" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 2:16 AM
Subject: [PHP] Holy Moly...
> Could someone please direct a tota
You could use the following preg statement:
preg_match_all( "/(.*(?=<\/table>))/", $string, $output,
PREG_SET_ORDER );
This would put all matches of some code, text, whatever into
the $output array. however you would start to have problems when you come
across nested tables. You'd need somethi
I have a script that outputs an image. Using the gd library. But the only way this
script gets to execute is if you call it like:
www.host.com/displayimage.php
That then sends the content header, and the image. Obviously I am doing some other
stuff in there, which is why I am using a scr
You can convert both date formats into a UNIX timestamp, then do a
picturedate > logindate.
To convert them into a unix timestamp you need to use strtotime function
http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.strtotime.php
$ldate = strtotime($logindate);
$pdate = strtotime($picturedate);
Perl Compatible Regular Expression:
"/'([a-z]+)-([a-z]+)\s([0-9]+:[0-9]+),\s([0-9]+:[0-9]+),\s([0-9]+:[0-9]+)'/"
Assuming the days of the week are always lower case? if not then use
[a-zA-Z] for the day matching.
Hope this helps.
--
Matt.
- Original Message -
From: "Cameron Just" <[E
Oh, I didnt read the bit at the bottom about the times appearing any number
of times. Off the top of my head I think this should work...
PREG:
"/'([a-z]+)-([a-z]+)\s(?:([0-9]+(?::[0-9]+|))(?:,\s)?)*'/"
--
Matt
- Original Message -
From: "Cameron Just" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL P
You can do recursive matching using the (?R) syntax in preg functions (Perl
Compatible Regular Expression).
- Original Message -
From: "Christopher William Wesley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Cameron Just" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2002 1:01 AM
Subj
Very nice. I was going to suggest:
But uhhh, your way is much nicer :]
- Original Message -
From: "Richard Archer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2002 4:04 AM
Subject: Re: [PHP] Regular Expression Challenge
> At 11:30 AM +1000 26/3/02, Cameron Ju
preg syntax is different to ereg (which you are using). You also need to
provide an output variable.
This would work:
preg_match( "/[0-9]+/", $input, $output );
--
Matt
"Carl E Shmidt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Now I'm looking to find
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