I have to completely agree with John here, set it as a subdomains.
That way you have http://italian.mysite.com, http://www.mysite.com
(english), http://french.mysite.com ... or you can always do
http://it.mysite.com, http://en.mysite.com, http://fr.mysite.com
Either way here's how you set the sess
Hi Daniel,
I can understand that you want to be able to change the language,
depending on the users wish, so that an italian in england can read
the site in italian.
But my question is more about the content - will the content be
dependent on the language or the domain extension - for example:
[e
Hey John,
well the italian site will display news and all other content in
Italian, while the .com in English.
The other solution I have is to use subdomains: it.mysite.com |
en.mysite.com
Daniel
On 16 Dic, 14:18, John Andersen wrote:
> Is that a good idea?
>
> What about the content? Will the
Is that a good idea?
What about the content? Will the content be for Italy also, when the
domain is .it?
Can you describe your site and what changes will happen to the
content, when a user changes the domain extension?
Enjoy,
John
On Dec 10, 4:48 pm, cakeFreak wrote:
> Hey guys,
>
> develop
Anybody about this?
Check out the new CakePHP Questions site http://cakeqs.org and help others with
their CakePHP related questions.
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"CakePHP" group.
To post to this group, send email to cake-php@googlegroups.com
To unsub
Hey guys,
developing a multilanguage application I thought to have different
languages according to the domain extension:
i.e.
mysite.com => english
mysite.it => italian
How can I keep the user authenticated across the 2 domains via
cookies?
---
I know that with su