php-general Digest 5 Mar 2011 05:41:35 - Issue 7211
Topics (messages 311667 through 311682):
Re: Somewhat OT - Stored Procedures
311667 by: Nathan Rixham
311668 by: Nathan Rixham
Re: Overriding session length in existing session?
311669 by: Scott Baker
-Original Message-
From: Ashley Sheridan [mailto:a...@ashleysheridan.co.uk]
Sent: Thursday, March 03, 2011 2:03 PM
To: sstap...@mnsi.net
Cc: php-general@lists.php.net
Subject: RE: [PHP] Check for open file
As far as I was aware, if you're in the middle of writing to a file
and
On Fri, 11 Feb 2011 14:42:18 -0800, Brian Dunning wrote:
Hey all -
I'm using mcrypt to store credit cards into MySQL. About 90%
of them decrypt fine, but about 10% decrypt as nonsense
(b1�\�JEÚU�A��� is a good example). Maybe there is a
character that appears in about 10% of my encryptions
This is called globally in *all* my scripts. In another script I'd
really like to set the session to expire after the browser closes if a
uses clicks public terminal or something.
Howdy. Don't sessions expire when the browser closes as a rule? Do
you mean the session cookie? Why not store
2011/3/4 Nisse Engström news.nospam.0ixbt...@luden.se:
On Fri, 11 Feb 2011 14:42:18 -0800, Brian Dunning wrote:
Hey all -
I'm using mcrypt to store credit cards into MySQL. About 90%
of them decrypt fine, but about 10% decrypt as nonsense
(b1�\�JEÚU�A��� is a good example). Maybe there is a
On 3 March 2011 18:30, Nathan Nobbe quickshif...@gmail.com wrote:
Hey gang,
(Yes Tedd, I like your style, when it pertains to how you address the list
:))
I have a new curiosity that's arisen as a result of a new contract I'm
working on, I'd like to bounce around some thoughts off the list
On 3 March 2011 19:59, Ashley M. Kirchner ash...@pcraft.com wrote:
Is there a clean or reliable way of checking to see if a
file is still being written to before doing anything with it?
Here's the scenario: we have a Samba share that we can copy
files to
Maybe I missed something here, but aren't the cc's held by the
merchant account provider, and just an id by you to recharge(recurring
or once), which can be disputed. I ask because it's been a while since
I had to look at this. So let the OP's question take precedence, and
mine secondary if
On Thu, Mar 3, 2011 at 14:59, Ashley M. Kirchner ash...@pcraft.com wrote:
Can PHP detect this, or should I look into some delayed
process of checking the file's modified time stamp versus current time and
not touch the file till a certain threshold has been reached (say 30
On Fri, 2011-03-04 at 09:55 -0500, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Thu, Mar 3, 2011 at 14:59, Ashley M. Kirchner ash...@pcraft.com wrote:
Can PHP detect this, or should I look into some delayed
process of checking the file's modified time stamp versus current time and
not touch the
Richard Sharp wrote:
I have been banging my head trying to figure out how to delay
$(document).ready() command until my php script finish running and load
data into a csv file. Any ideas
*which* PHP script? are you returning an HTML document then keeping the
script going in the background,
Hi Nathan,
Nathan Nobbe wrote:
Also, bear in mind that personally I tend to favor OO paradigms for
application development so would prefer feedback that incorporates that
tendency.
Initial thoughts are
Bad:
. Not well suited for ORM, particularly procedures which return multiple
result sets
Richard Quadling wrote:
At a fundamental level, my PHP code isn't concerning itself with any
physical data structures. As much as possible my PHP code treats the
sql data source as a processor ready to supply data in a standardized
form (even hierarchical) and to accept data for storage (again
Hi there!,
I have been reading this list before but this is my first post.
Reading some code from Symfony I got this: $this-getTable()-getColumns()
...when you can use this double method access?, I used before the
regular $this-getTable(), but two?. I mean I have been trying but I got an
error*
*
On 03/04/2011 09:25 PM, Paola Alvarez wrote:
Hi there!,
I have been reading this list before but this is my first post.
Reading some code from Symfony I got this: $this-getTable()-getColumns()
...when you can use this double method access?, I used before the
regular $this-getTable(), but two?. I
That's called method chaining. -getColumns() will get called on the
object returned by -getTable(). That is, getTable() returns an object
(presumably representing an SQL table, I guess), and that object has a
getColumns() method, which you call.
This is an extremely common style in
Hello,
I'm using the PHP OAuth extension and running into a strange issue. I'm not
sure if it's a bug in PHP 5.3.5, or if it's a bug in the OAuth extension
when installed on a system with PHP 5.3.5.
On a machine with PHP 5.3.5, when I call OAuth::fetch() with http method of
POST, the debug info
Hi, thanks a lot Alex and Larry for your very clear answer!
Paola,
On Fri, Mar 4, 2011 at 4:33 PM, la...@garfieldtech.com
la...@garfieldtech.com wrote:
That's called method chaining. -getColumns() will get called on the
object returned by -getTable(). That is, getTable() returns an object
I think that my suggestion is still a valid solution, someone correct
me if I'm wrong. Let's say your code went like this:
session_start();
// Check to see if the session variable has already been set, if not
if (!isset($_SESSION['var'])){
// Check to see if it's been stored in a
Hi All.
I have a Windows desktop app that I created using Visual Foxpro (a database
app).
I want to write a PHP script that I will call from my desktop app. The script
will simply
query a MySQL database on my web server and return the recordset to the desktop
app.
My question is simply this:
Assuming you mean that the PHP script is on a web server somewhere and
the desktop app is hitting it over HTTP, it's no different than any
other response. Anything you print will be sent back to the client, in
this case your desktop a.. So if you want to send XML back, you'd build
a string
Correction:
I stated the incorrect version of PHP that does not seem to have this issue.
The version of PHP that works correctly is 5.3.2, not 5.3.3.
Thanks,
daniel
On Fri, Mar 4, 2011 at 11:40 AM, Daniel Hong dan...@amagineinc.com wrote:
Hello,
I'm using the PHP OAuth extension and running
On 3/4/2011 5:18 PM, Daniel Hong wrote:
Correction:
I stated the incorrect version of PHP that does not seem to have this issue.
The version of PHP that works correctly is 5.3.2, not 5.3.3.
Can you give us an example of what you are doing?
Jim Lucas
Thanks,
daniel
On Fri, Mar 4,
Hi Jim,
I'm using oauth to connect to Dropbox. The OAuth::getRequestToken()
and OAuth::getAccessToken()
works without a problem since (assuming) those are sent over the wire as a
GET request. When I try to issue a fetch command, for example:
$oauth-enableDebug()
Ok, I'm such a dud. Looks like someone had already reported this exact bug
http://pecl.php.net/bugs/bug.php?id=22485
I actually was looking at the problematic method in the source, but didn't
catch the problem. But now that someone has pointed it out, it's so obvious.
I deserve a slap on the back
Dear all,
I was reading this page
http://php.net/manual/en/reserved.variables.globals.php and I found the
following script there :
Here's a function which returns an array of all user defined global
variables:
?php
function globals() {
$globals = $GLOBALS;
foreach (array(
After a long battle to get my system back on air after a hard disk crash, I got
PHP 5.3.5
running under Apache 2.2.3. I now get a diagnostic every time I call date(),
complaining
about a missing parameter. The manual states that the second parameter is
optional, and
even phpinfo doesn't know
On 5/03/2011, at 8:29 PM, clanc...@cybec.com.au wrote:
After a long battle to get my system back on air after a hard disk crash, I
got PHP 5.3.5
running under Apache 2.2.3. I now get a diagnostic every time I call date(),
complaining
about a missing parameter. The manual states that the
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