I think you'll need something like this:
VALUE=\'Your Name1\' / /single quote marks I believe (and I certainly
could be wrong).
otherwise it'll truncate at 'Your'
of course, if this is what you want...
Hugh
- Original Message -
From: Luke Welling [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL
You're wrong here, my friend. You can have any value you like.
value=@£$ASDFSDF ASDP fosifu @}{$#%/@would work.
Niklas
-Original Message-
From: hugh danaher [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 1. helmikuuta 2002 10:48
To: Luke Welling
Cc: Php-General
Subject: Re: [PHP] Re: Anyone
* hugh danaher ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [Feb 01. 2002 03:48]:
I think you'll need something like this:
VALUE=\'Your Name1\' / /single quote marks I believe (and I certainly
could be wrong).
otherwise it'll truncate at 'Your'
of course, if this is what you want...
(Not trying to pick on
and is
looking at Name # as the next instruction, which it isn't. My two cents for
the evening.
Hugh
- Original Message -
From: Brian Clark [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: PHP is not a drug. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, February 01, 2002 12:54 AM
Subject: Re: [PHP] Re: Anyone Up?
* hugh danaher
* hugh danaher ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [Feb 01. 2002 04:21]:
Not familiar with anything but php and html.
XHTML isn't too different. There are different `rules' -- like tags
and attributes must be lower case, values must be surrounded by double
quotes, tags without closing tags: br /, img
Message-
From: hugh danaher [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 1. helmikuuta 2002 11:21
To: Php-General
Subject: Re: [PHP] Re: Anyone Up?
Not familiar with anything but php and html. I know that in a type=text
(obviously not a checkbox) if you don't use the escape backslashes, the
value
- Original Message -
From: Brian Clark [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: PHP is not a drug. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, February 01, 2002 12:54 AM
Subject: Re: [PHP] Re: Anyone Up?
* hugh danaher ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [Feb 01. 2002 03:48]:
I think you'll need something like
On Fri, 2002-02-01 at 01:33, Brian Clark wrote:
* hugh danaher ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [Feb 01. 2002 04:21]:
Not familiar with anything but php and html.
XHTML isn't too different. There are different `rules' -- like tags
and attributes must be lower case, values must be surrounded by
* Lars Torben Wilson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [Feb 01. 2002 05:07]:
On Fri, 2002-02-01 at 01:33, Brian Clark wrote:
XHTML isn't too different. There are different `rules' -- like tags
and attributes must be lower case, values must be surrounded by
double quotes, tags without closing tags: br
On Friday, February 1, 2002, at 05:07 AM, Lars Torben Wilson wrote:
Everything is correct 'cept the 'double quotes' bit--XML accepts
attribute values enclosed in either single or double quotes.
Yes, and to extend on that: you need to stick to one convention or the
other throughout the
On Fri, 2002-02-01 at 10:48, Erik Price wrote:
On Friday, February 1, 2002, at 05:07 AM, Lars Torben Wilson wrote:
Everything is correct 'cept the 'double quotes' bit--XML accepts
attribute values enclosed in either single or double quotes.
Yes, and to extend on that: you need to
On Friday, February 1, 2002, at 03:05 PM, Lars Torben Wilson wrote:
Everything is correct 'cept the 'double quotes' bit--XML accepts
attribute values enclosed in either single or double quotes.
Yes, and to extend on that: you need to stick to one convention or the
other throughout the
On Fri, 2002-02-01 at 13:54, Erik Price wrote:
Hm... I don't know why I thought otherwise. I checked with the spec
(http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/#h-4.4), and it really doesn't say yes or
no to this. But I'm sure you're right, since some attributes contain
quoted content, which is why you
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