ID: 20923 User updated by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reported By: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Status: Open Bug Type: HTTP related Operating System: Windows XP PHP Version: 4.2.3 New Comment:
I just wrote another script just to confirm the problem, and, well instead I did the opposite. This script seems to have upset my previous thoughts, so I'll keep trying to figure out what the problem is, it may be my own fault. <?php setcookie( "one", "uno", time()+10000 ); setcookie( "two", "dos", time()+10000 ); echo $_COOKIE['one'], '=1<br>', $_COOKIE['two'], '=2<br>', setcookie( "three", "tres", time()+10000 ); setcookie( "four", "quatro", time()+10000 ); echo $_COOKIE['three'], '=3<br>', $_COOKIE['four'], '=4<br>'; ?> Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2002-12-10 11:09:29] [EMAIL PROTECTED] I just went from PHP 4.1.2 to 4.2.3, and after some investigation, found that setcookie would absolutely not set cookies. So I wrote a test script to flip a cookie value each time you reloaded the script. But it worked just fine. I investigated some more. Totally confused, I wrote a script to flip a cookie again, but this time it didn't work. It turned out that if I setcookie() after sending non-header data, that the cookie never showed up. I remembered that previously I would get a header error, and also remembered that in the PHP.INI that came with the new php, they had enabled output buffering. Changing the buffering settings seems to makes no difference. My PHP Build was just one downloaded from the php.net downloads page, nothing special about it. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=20923&edit=1