Octavian Rasnita wrote:
I don't know, but this is not the right way.
You need to open each image in perl with open(), read the content of the file, then print each content one after another.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Andrew Gaffney" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
So, if I were to do 'cat 1.gif 2.gif 3.gif 4.gif > 1234.gif' at the
command line, I'd get
a GIF that displays '1234' if each of the original file contains a number?
Octavian Rasnita wrote:
Open each image file and print their content one after another and they
will
be printed right. Don't forget to use the right HTTP header for printing an image
(image/gif).
And don't forget to open the files using binmode if you are under
Windows.
But your program will be totally useless for the blind visitors that
won't
be able to read that image on the screen. A better idea would be to use server side includes and print a text hit counter, or use Javascript to include the text generated by a CGI script
if
your server doesn't accept SSI.
Teddy
----- Original Message ----- From: "Andrew Gaffney" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Jon Barnhardt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 11, 2003 7:58 PM
Subject: Re: hit counter
That will work, but I'd like to combine them into one image if possible.
Jon Barnhardt wrote:
name your gifs 1.gif, 2.gif 3.gif 4.gif, etc
once you have your number stored in a variable (hit count), split it
into an array then loop through the array and append the .gif to the
number
and write the path to page as an image source.
Logic:
myvariable = 12536 <-- hit count amount myarray = myvariable split by number for i = 0 to end of array "<img src>" & myarray(i) & ".gif</img src>" next
-- Andrew Gaffney
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-- Andrew Gaffney
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