On 11/28/07, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> > In my solution, I use two scripts. One for showing the image true size
> > and another for generating a thumbnail -- I may be wrong, but I think
> > it's better to generate a thumbnail as needed on the fly than it is to
> > store both images (large and thumbnail) in the dB.
>
> Cache it on the filesystem even if it's for a short time (of course if
> the image is updated elsewhere the cache needs to be cleared as well..).
>
>
> <?php
>
> $file = '/path/to/cache/file.jpg';
> if (file_exists($file)) {
>   if (filemtime($file) > strtotime('-30 minutes')) {
>     $fp = fopen($file, 'rb');
>     fpassthru($fp);
>     exit;
>   }
>
>   // the file is older than 30 minutes, kill it and start again.
>   unlink($file);
> }
>
> // continue creating your thumbnail.
>
> $fp = fopen('/path/to/cache/' . $filename, 'wb');
> fputs($fp, $imagecontents);
> fclose($fp);
>
> // display image
>
> --


Thanks for all the suggestions, guys. I was really trying to understand,
through extending it, the code from the reference (
http://www.wellho.net/solutions/php-example-php-form-image-upload-store-in-mysql-database-retreive.html
 ).

David

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