Hi,
I have a similar problem at the moment. I was waiting to scrape together an
example, but since you posted first I will jump into the discussion now.
My problem is that I have a large array (without any funnies like
self-referencing) getting serialized. There are some funnies in the string
fields though (like `'`s etc). After making a roundtrip to the mysql
database, things start to get bad on me since I cannot unserialize the text
anymore. This only happens for some of the arrays that I have. Other arrays
with similar data can get serialized and unserialized just fine.
I do suspect though, that the problem lies with how I am using addslashes
and how I am not using it. Any definitive help would be much appreciated.
pieter
On 5/16/05, Petzo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> My question is about the norlmal behaviour of PHP and MYSQL but I cant
> explain it without a simple example. Thank you for reading:
>
> I have the following code:
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> <?php
> print $t = $_POST['txt'];
> print $t = addslashes($t);
>
> @ $db = mysql_pconnect(xxx,xxx,xxx);
> mysql_select_db('test');
>
> $q = "update ttable set ffield='$t'";
> mysql_query($q);
>
> $q = "select * from ttable";
> $result = mysql_query($q);
> $bo = mysql_fetch_array($result);
>
> print $t = $bo['ffield'];
> print $t = stripslashes($t);
> ?>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> from a HTML form I send variable:
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ' \ \' \\ \\\
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> after addshashes it becomes:
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> \' \\ \\\' \\\\ \\\\\\
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> after that it gets in the database
>
> but after I get it out it becomes:
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ' \ \' \\ \\\
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> (without the backslashes!)
>
> and ofcourse after stripslashes it gets messed-up:
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ' ' \ \
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> So my question is if this is a normal behaviour for PHP+MYSQL or it may
> vary
> indifferent conficurations or versions of both php or mysql.
> It's not a bad thing to be like that but I wonder if my code will behave
> the
> same at most systems.
>
> Thank you very much
>
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>
--
"Maybe I'm a little bit crazy, but I can't decide if it's psychotic or
neurotic. You know the difference, don't you? A psychotic thinks that 2 + 2
= 5. A neurotic knows that 2 + 2 = 4, but it makes him nervous." - Larry
Wall, The State of the Onion (speech) 2004.
http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2004/08/18/onion.html