Hi,
At work we use Java so one thing is annoying me. Is there really no
way to create a persistent object in PHP? As far as my understanding
goes each object will be recreated on each and every request.
The reason I was asking is I wanted to create a form object that would
be used as follows.
ead. And my thinking, though
im sure someone would love to correct me, is that sessions can be stored in
memory via a technology like
memcached.
-nathan
On 7/15/07, Wesley Acheson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> At work we use Java so one thing is annoying me. Is there
On 7/18/07, Richard Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sun, July 15, 2007 2:25 pm, Wesley Acheson wrote:
> 1. Does the answer below mean no global persistant objects?
> (Application scope) I guess that it does.
Pretty much, yes.
PHP is more Unix-like in quickly spitting out an an
example it inserts a byte order
mark incorrectly. \ufeff. is what it comes out if I run the
native2ascii program.This isn't technically correct behaviour and it
shouldn't occur.
Regards,
Wesley Acheson
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I'm looking to do a fairly large scale project.
The problem is I don't know how much of it to write myself how much I
could get away with using existing components (modified as necessary).
Basically the different areas I would need are authentication,
galleries (for images), permission levels.
Its not actually a dating site. :)
However it does look like the site that you have given has some
intresting resources.
Thanks for your time.
Regards,
Wes
On 8/13/06, tedd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I'm looking to do a fairly large scale project.
>
>The problem is I don't know how much of i
Hi,
I'm not really sure if this question belongs on these lists - please
forgive if it isn't. I've got a project running locally.
I've got a phing build.xml in the root directory and a document
structure based like this.
webroot/incudes/package/fileToBeTested.inc
webroot/includes/package/t/FileT
They could also be doing something like giving the client an SSH key
to download, I've heard of this situation in a bank before.
Though it does seem more likely that their just using cookie based
authentication
-
From: "Rahul S.
I don't see how its that much of a secuity risk, they create a ssh
tunnel. All it does is add an extra layer of authentication. Its not
like the password requirements are bypassed.
On 10/3/06, Richard Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, October 3, 2006 2:33 am, Wesley Ac
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