RE: [PHP] phpsadness - the second tangent...
Really? This thread is going to tangent yet again to something completely irrelevant? FWIW, I used some stupid "WinLIKE" JS framework by http://ceiton.com These bastards haven't updated it since 2007 http://wiki.winlike.net/index.php/Version_History Normally not a big deal, but they "patented" it (or tried), and it's all minified and IN GERMAN! So trying to figure out how and where to remove that browser check has been a futile effort that I just don't care to spend any more time on. This is yet another reason and example as to why I HATE frameworks. I should have never used their crappy one and just built everything myself. My current PERSONAL site is starting to show its age and is due for a re-vamp, but honestly I just have too much other work on my plate that pays me. 90% of the people out there use FF or IE and so I don't really care about Safari or Opera or the other fringe browsers for my PERSONAL site. -Original Message- From: Tamara Temple [mailto:tamouse.li...@gmail.com] Sent: Saturday, June 04, 2011 10:09 PM To: Daevid Vincent Cc: php-general@lists.php.net Subject: Re: [PHP] phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee. On Jun 3, 2011, at 3:52 PM, Daevid Vincent wrote: > ...actually, I do have some good ones here: > http://daevid.com/content/examples/procmail.php "It appears your browser does not support some of the advanced features this site requires. Please use Internet Explorer or Firefox." ROFL. Good one. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 11-06-05 07:28 PM, Richard Quadling wrote: On 5 June 2011 19:15, Robert Cummings wrote: 2 words... progressive enhancement. If your browser doesn't support a feature then it should degrade gracefully. Accessible web philosophy 101. I hate going on to some website, especially government, and finding that it sniffs my browser and then completely excludes me if it doesn't like what it finds. There is another approach. Regressive Enhancement. Essentially, create your site with all the bells and whistles enabled. Make full use of all / any standards compliant feature. For browsers not capable of supporting that, use emulation techniques. Sitepoint have a blog about this technique : http://blogs.sitepoint.com/regressive-enhancement-with-modernizr-and-yepnope/ From my cursory read... regressive enhancement would need to rely on progressive enhancement to work :) If there's no JavaScript to do the lifting, then how can you regress? An interesting read all the same. It's kind of like the compatibility layer PEAR releases for older versions of PHP so they have access to newer functions and stuff but implemented in PHP rather than C. Cheers, Rob. -- E-Mail Disclaimer: Information contained in this message and any attached documents is considered confidential and legally protected. This message is intended solely for the addressee(s). Disclosure, copying, and distribution are prohibited unless authorized. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 11-06-05 07:28 PM, tedd wrote: At 2:15 PM -0400 6/5/11, Robert Cummings wrote: 2 words... progressive enhancement. If your browser doesn't support a feature then it should degrade gracefully. Accessible web philosophy 101. I hate going on to some website, especially government, and finding that it sniffs my browser and then completely excludes me if it doesn't like what it finds. Cheers, Rob. Rob: Yeah, I agree, but it is also *you* -- so exclusion is understandable. :-) As my kids are all too fond of saying to me... *PTHTHTHTHTTHTH*! :D Cheers, Rob. -- E-Mail Disclaimer: Information contained in this message and any attached documents is considered confidential and legally protected. This message is intended solely for the addressee(s). Disclosure, copying, and distribution are prohibited unless authorized. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 5 June 2011 19:15, Robert Cummings wrote: > 2 words... progressive enhancement. If your browser doesn't support a > feature then it should degrade gracefully. Accessible web philosophy 101. I > hate going on to some website, especially government, and finding that it > sniffs my browser and then completely excludes me if it doesn't like what it > finds. There is another approach. Regressive Enhancement. Essentially, create your site with all the bells and whistles enabled. Make full use of all / any standards compliant feature. For browsers not capable of supporting that, use emulation techniques. Sitepoint have a blog about this technique : http://blogs.sitepoint.com/regressive-enhancement-with-modernizr-and-yepnope/ -- Richard Quadling Twitter : EE : Zend : PHPDoc @RQuadling : e-e.com/M_248814.html : bit.ly/9O8vFY : bit.ly/lFnVea -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
At 2:15 PM -0400 6/5/11, Robert Cummings wrote: On 11-06-05 09:33 AM, Richard Riley wrote: Geoff Shang writes: On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Tim Streater wrote: Anyone whose site says that sort of crap needs a good smack. Don't get me started on Facebook. If they don't like your browser, they redirect you to their"We don't support your browser page". They don't even let you try with your unsupported browser, which might well work if you're clicking on a link to a particular status update. Geoff. Why do you feel FB should support some antiquated browser that doesnt support any of the newer technoogies which enable security and more advanced client side rendering? If people want to use Lynx or W3m then go ahead : just dont expect everyone else to pander to your desire to stay old school. Google are now refusing to support older browsers like ie7 too. 2 words... progressive enhancement. If your browser doesn't support a feature then it should degrade gracefully. Accessible web philosophy 101. I hate going on to some website, especially government, and finding that it sniffs my browser and then completely excludes me if it doesn't like what it finds. Cheers, Rob. Rob: Yeah, I agree, but it is also *you* -- so exclusion is understandable. :-) Cheers, tedd -- --- http://sperling.com/ -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
At 6:29 PM +0100 6/5/11, Ashley Sheridan wrote: I think his point is that a lot of websites ignorantly stop browsers not on their list of compatible ones, and end up blocking browsers that would work perfectly well, just the original developer either wasn't aware or didn't care. This used to be in the form of Javascript detecting if a browser was IE, and if it wasn't, assuming blindly it was Netscape Navigator. Now Fx seems to be in that position, and many sites ignore perfectly good browsers like Chrome, Safari, Opera & Konqueror to name a few. All of these are modern browsers, yet they will be blocked by stupid code. -- Thanks, Ash 1+ Absolutely. If you want to have a web site it figures that you want as many visitors as possible. If you restrict visitors to specific browsers then runs contrary to your interest-- and that is just plain ignorant. For example, I just found a web site where I wanted to order a car part. In their search form they asked for my auto's make and year. After I provided that information, without providing me anything, they asked me for the part number I was interested in purchasing. What How do I know what their part number is for the auto-part I want? I'm going to use their web site as an example of how NOT to design a form. While they may know the auto-parts biz, they are clueless about how to provide their products to visitors via their web site. I've had more than one client tell me "Just have the computer do it" -- to which I reply "I tried, but the computer just sits there. How do you do it?" Ignorance in leaps and bounds everywhere. Cheers, tedd -- --- http://sperling.com/ -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Help needed with php.ini
On 05-06-2011, at 10:31, Adam Tong wrote: > Hi, > > I can't set correctly the error display and reporting properties. I > don't know what i'm doing wrong. > > Here is the section that i modified in php.ini: > - > display_errors = On > ; Default Value: On > ; Development Value: On > ; Production Value: Off > > display_startup_errors = On > ; Default Value: Off > ; Development Value: On > ; Production Value: Off > > error_reporting = E_ALL | E_STRICT > ; Default Value: E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE > ; Development Value: E_ALL | E_STRICT > ; Production Value: E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED > > > And here is the output of phpinfo(): > - > display_errorsOffOff > display_startup_errorsOffOff > doc_rootno valueno value > docref_extno valueno value > docref_rootno valueno value > enable_dlOffOff > error_append_stringno valueno value > error_logno valueno value > error_prepend_stringno valueno value > error_reporting2252722527 > - > > I'm using a default installation (using yum) of php on Fedora14. This > is my development environment, and want to see all the errors on > standard output. > > Thank you > > -- > PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) > To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php > Have you modified the example values instead of the ones mid-way php.ini? If so, scroll down to check. The latest settings should override the previous one. Have you restarted apache with service httpd restart or /etc/init.d/httpd restart? (or apachectl restart) In your php script or htaccess file, do you override those values? Sent from my iPhone 5 Beta [Confidential use only] -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 05 Jun 2011 at 21:28, Geoff Shang wrote: > On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: > >> If they allowed incompatible browsers that caused havoc then before you >> know it the great unwashed would be demanding more and better support or >> complaining about lack of functionality. Doing what they do they make it >> very clear from day one. > > This would be a fair enough attitude if they only applied it to their > member sections, but they don't. They set themselves up as publishers of > information, page hosts of sorts, then don't let anyone in who wants to > *read* them. This sums it up better than I could: Anyone who slaps a 'this page is best viewed with Browser X' label on a Web page appears to be yearning for the bad old days, before the Web, when you had very little chance of reading a document written on another computer, another word processor, or another network. -- Tim Berners-Lee -- Cheers -- Tim -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: Found this and I thought of you.
On Sun, Jun 5, 2011 at 11:44 AM, Jonesy wrote: > On Sun, 5 Jun 2011 00:34:30 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote: >> http://www.exxcire.com/login.php >> >> If nothing more than a good "bad example". > > ROTFLMAO!!! "Where Experts Exchange" > Sweet Jeezuz! At least they have a cute 404 page. Gotta count for *something*! Ken -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: If they allowed incompatible browsers that caused havoc then before you know it the great unwashed would be demanding more and better support or complaining about lack of functionality. Doing what they do they make it very clear from day one. This would be a fair enough attitude if they only applied it to their member sections, but they don't. They set themselves up as publishers of information, page hosts of sorts, then don't let anyone in who wants to *read* them. Dont like it? The APIs are open. Write your own interfaces to their authentication and graph API and target the parts that wont result in your accuont being banned for chucking access tokens around and breaking their security model. Totally not the point. Quite aside from the fact that Mobile Facebook works extremely well with Lynx, and so did Facebook Lite until they sadly took it away, it's not what I'm having trouble with. An example of what I'm talking about is the following tweet: ABCGrandStand: #nrl : NSW ORIGIN team game two.. Dugan, Hayne, Hopoate, Gasnier, Uate, Soward, Pearce, Gallen, Ennis, Mannah,... http://fb.me/uPHxKiFC http://twitter.com/abcgrandstand/status/77271757383413760 Now, correct me if I'm wrong, but there's no need to log in or anything remotely 21st-century required to read the rest of this post. All you need to do is click the URL and the appropriate Facebook status will come up, which you're free to read without any further clicking on your part. But only if you're using a browser that's been blessed by the Facebook gods. If you're not, you're sent to http://www.facebook.com/common/browser.php with no other course of action. I hope you can appreciate my point. The choice to use Facebook was a decision made by the person sending the tweet, not me. It's not going to kill them to either let me see the page with appropriate functionality warnings, or to flick-pass me to the equivalent mobile Facebook page. I can't view it on the mobile site myself without first resolving where the shortened URL points to, changing the "www" to "m" and hoping it works, or signing in and trying to find it myself. Even Twitter, who don't let me login to the regular site without javascript, are quite happy to let me view tweets unauthenticated on their site with Lynx. If I want to login, I need to use their mobile site. Not a problem - if I try to use their main site and it doesn't work, it doesn't work. At least they let me try. Geoff. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 11-06-05 02:25 PM, Richard Riley wrote: Ashley Sheridan writes: > I think his point is that a lot of websites ignorantly stop browsers not on their list of compatible ones, and end up blocking browsers that would work perfectly well, just the original developer either wasn't aware or didn't care. This used to be in the form of Javascript detecting if a browser was IE, and if it wasn't, assuming blindly it was Netscape Navigator. Now Fx seems to be in that position, and many sites ignore perfectly good browsers like Chrome, Safari, Opera& Konqueror to name a few. All of these are modern browsers, yet they will be blocked by stupid code. Ignorant blocking is a different matter and I would agree. Blocking because someone is using out of date or incapable browsers is another issue. It is the latter, and specifically something with a rich UI that requires secure connections like FB that I am discussing. Secure connection and rich UI should not in any way tread on the other's role and responsibility. Authentication and authorization control security, not the UI. If the UI controls the level of security then the solution is broken. A well designed website should be navigable with a screen reader without any of the DHTML and Ajax bits. That some sites aren't, is just pure laziness. Information is information, websites just present the information and it can be presented in multiple ways. Progressive enhancement should be able to take a plain vanilla webpage and blingify it, while leaving a navigable website via traditional means. Cheers, Rob. -- E-Mail Disclaimer: Information contained in this message and any attached documents is considered confidential and legally protected. This message is intended solely for the addressee(s). Disclosure, copying, and distribution are prohibited unless authorized. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
[PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
Ashley Sheridan writes: > On Sun, 2011-06-05 at 19:23 +0200, Richard Riley wrote: > >> Geoff Shang writes: >> >> > On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: >> > >> >>> I don't. I just don't want them to lock out my browser just because >> >>> they don't >> >>> support it. Many pages which don't work optimally under Lynx can still >> >>> be read, >> >>> which is all I'm wanting to do anyway. >> >> >> >> They need to or there can be unintentional side affects that will >> >> reflect badly on them and possibly you. >> > >> > Rubbish. All they need to do is what everyone else does and say "This >> > site may >> > not work well on your browser, we recommend using Internet Explorer or >> > firefox" >> > (or whatever they support). Then if I choose to use it, it's on my own >> > head, >> > which is fine by me. >> >> Not rubbish at all. They owe you nothing. >> >> Not everyone is you. >> >> If they allowed incompatible browsers that caused havoc then before you >> know it the great unwashed would be demanding more and better support or >> complaining about lack of functionality. Doing what they do they make it >> very clear from day one. >> >> Dont like it? The APIs are open. Write your own interfaces to their >> authentication and graph API and target the parts that wont result in >> your accuont being banned for chucking access tokens around and breaking >> their security model. >> >> Simple solution : use an uptodate capable browser if you want to use >> these technologies. I really dont see why people whine. >> >> >> >> > > I think his point is that a lot of websites ignorantly stop browsers not > on their list of compatible ones, and end up blocking browsers that > would work perfectly well, just the original developer either wasn't > aware or didn't care. This used to be in the form of Javascript > detecting if a browser was IE, and if it wasn't, assuming blindly it was > Netscape Navigator. Now Fx seems to be in that position, and many sites > ignore perfectly good browsers like Chrome, Safari, Opera & Konqueror to > name a few. All of these are modern browsers, yet they will be blocked > by stupid code. Ignorant blocking is a different matter and I would agree. Blocking because someone is using out of date or incapable browsers is another issue. It is the latter, and specifically something with a rich UI that requires secure connections like FB that I am discussing. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 11-06-05 01:40 PM, Paul M Foster wrote: On Fri, Jun 03, 2011 at 01:52:15PM -0700, Daevid Vincent wrote: and I'm "balding" from Alopecia Me too, but in my case, it's just 'cause I'm old. ;-} My sympathies to you both... I'm baling because I produce a lot of testosterone >:D Although, everything I read about having children suggests my estrogen is likely at an all time high! Cheers, Rob. -- E-Mail Disclaimer: Information contained in this message and any attached documents is considered confidential and legally protected. This message is intended solely for the addressee(s). Disclosure, copying, and distribution are prohibited unless authorized. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 11-06-05 01:23 PM, Richard Riley wrote: Geoff Shang writes: On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: I don't. I just don't want them to lock out my browser just because they don't support it. Many pages which don't work optimally under Lynx can still be read, which is all I'm wanting to do anyway. They need to or there can be unintentional side affects that will reflect badly on them and possibly you. Rubbish. All they need to do is what everyone else does and say "This site may not work well on your browser, we recommend using Internet Explorer or firefox" (or whatever they support). Then if I choose to use it, it's on my own head, which is fine by me. Not rubbish at all. They owe you nothing. Not everyone is you. If they allowed incompatible browsers that caused havoc then before you know it the great unwashed would be demanding more and better support or complaining about lack of functionality. Doing what they do they make it very clear from day one. Dont like it? The APIs are open. Write your own interfaces to their authentication and graph API and target the parts that wont result in your accuont being banned for chucking access tokens around and breaking their security model. If it's that easy to break their security model then it's not secure! Cheers, Rob. -- E-Mail Disclaimer: Information contained in this message and any attached documents is considered confidential and legally protected. This message is intended solely for the addressee(s). Disclosure, copying, and distribution are prohibited unless authorized. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 11-06-05 09:33 AM, Richard Riley wrote: Geoff Shang writes: On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Tim Streater wrote: Anyone whose site says that sort of crap needs a good smack. Don't get me started on Facebook. If they don't like your browser, they redirect you to their"We don't support your browser page". They don't even let you try with your unsupported browser, which might well work if you're clicking on a link to a particular status update. Geoff. Why do you feel FB should support some antiquated browser that doesnt support any of the newer technoogies which enable security and more advanced client side rendering? If people want to use Lynx or W3m then go ahead : just dont expect everyone else to pander to your desire to stay old school. Google are now refusing to support older browsers like ie7 too. 2 words... progressive enhancement. If your browser doesn't support a feature then it should degrade gracefully. Accessible web philosophy 101. I hate going on to some website, especially government, and finding that it sniffs my browser and then completely excludes me if it doesn't like what it finds. Cheers, Rob. -- E-Mail Disclaimer: Information contained in this message and any attached documents is considered confidential and legally protected. This message is intended solely for the addressee(s). Disclosure, copying, and distribution are prohibited unless authorized. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On Fri, Jun 03, 2011 at 01:52:15PM -0700, Daevid Vincent wrote: > and I'm "balding" from Alopecia Me too, but in my case, it's just 'cause I'm old. ;-} Paul -- Paul M. Foster http://noferblatz.com http://quillandmouse.com -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On Sun, 2011-06-05 at 19:23 +0200, Richard Riley wrote: > Geoff Shang writes: > > > On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: > > > >>> I don't. I just don't want them to lock out my browser just because they > >>> don't > >>> support it. Many pages which don't work optimally under Lynx can still > >>> be read, > >>> which is all I'm wanting to do anyway. > >> > >> They need to or there can be unintentional side affects that will > >> reflect badly on them and possibly you. > > > > Rubbish. All they need to do is what everyone else does and say "This site > > may > > not work well on your browser, we recommend using Internet Explorer or > > firefox" > > (or whatever they support). Then if I choose to use it, it's on my own > > head, > > which is fine by me. > > Not rubbish at all. They owe you nothing. > > Not everyone is you. > > If they allowed incompatible browsers that caused havoc then before you > know it the great unwashed would be demanding more and better support or > complaining about lack of functionality. Doing what they do they make it > very clear from day one. > > Dont like it? The APIs are open. Write your own interfaces to their > authentication and graph API and target the parts that wont result in > your accuont being banned for chucking access tokens around and breaking > their security model. > > Simple solution : use an uptodate capable browser if you want to use > these technologies. I really dont see why people whine. > > > > I think his point is that a lot of websites ignorantly stop browsers not on their list of compatible ones, and end up blocking browsers that would work perfectly well, just the original developer either wasn't aware or didn't care. This used to be in the form of Javascript detecting if a browser was IE, and if it wasn't, assuming blindly it was Netscape Navigator. Now Fx seems to be in that position, and many sites ignore perfectly good browsers like Chrome, Safari, Opera & Konqueror to name a few. All of these are modern browsers, yet they will be blocked by stupid code. -- Thanks, Ash http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk
[PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
Geoff Shang writes: > On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: > >>> I don't. I just don't want them to lock out my browser just because they >>> don't >>> support it. Many pages which don't work optimally under Lynx can still be >>> read, >>> which is all I'm wanting to do anyway. >> >> They need to or there can be unintentional side affects that will >> reflect badly on them and possibly you. > > Rubbish. All they need to do is what everyone else does and say "This site > may > not work well on your browser, we recommend using Internet Explorer or > firefox" > (or whatever they support). Then if I choose to use it, it's on my own head, > which is fine by me. Not rubbish at all. They owe you nothing. Not everyone is you. If they allowed incompatible browsers that caused havoc then before you know it the great unwashed would be demanding more and better support or complaining about lack of functionality. Doing what they do they make it very clear from day one. Dont like it? The APIs are open. Write your own interfaces to their authentication and graph API and target the parts that wont result in your accuont being banned for chucking access tokens around and breaking their security model. Simple solution : use an uptodate capable browser if you want to use these technologies. I really dont see why people whine. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
[PHP] Re: Found this and I thought of you.
On Sun, 5 Jun 2011 00:34:30 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote: > http://www.exxcire.com/login.php > > If nothing more than a good "bad example". ROTFLMAO!!! "Where Experts Exchange" Sweet Jeezuz! -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 05 Jun 2011 at 16:23, Geoff Shang wrote: > On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: > >>> I don't. I just don't want them to lock out my browser just because they >>> don't >>> support it. Many pages which don't work optimally under Lynx can still be >>> read, >>> which is all I'm wanting to do anyway. >> >> They need to or there can be unintentional side affects that will >> reflect badly on them and possibly you. > > Rubbish. All they need to do is what everyone else does and say "This > site may not work well on your browser, we recommend using Internet > Explorer or firefox" (or whatever they support). Then if I choose to use > it, it's on my own head, which is fine by me. > >> If you really want a half arsed user experience then set your browser >> string ;) Would that not work for you? > > It probably would. But this tangent began with the principle of "Use IE > or Firefox" and how we hated sites that said that. It's the principle of > the thing. Yes. You might (just) be able to justify something really old [1], but Safari 5.0.5? I find that to be a damn cheek. I expect sites to be standards-based. [1] Don't ask me what that means. I've not kept up with what new stuff is around now that wasn't, ten years ago. -- Cheers -- Tim -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: I don't. I just don't want them to lock out my browser just because they don't support it. Many pages which don't work optimally under Lynx can still be read, which is all I'm wanting to do anyway. They need to or there can be unintentional side affects that will reflect badly on them and possibly you. Rubbish. All they need to do is what everyone else does and say "This site may not work well on your browser, we recommend using Internet Explorer or firefox" (or whatever they support). Then if I choose to use it, it's on my own head, which is fine by me. If you really want a half arsed user experience then set your browser string ;) Would that not work for you? It probably would. But this tangent began with the principle of "Use IE or Firefox" and how we hated sites that said that. It's the principle of the thing. Geoff. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Help needed with php.ini
> > > And here is the output of phpinfo(): > - In the same phpinfo() output, what is the path/location of the php.ini file you are using? Loaded Configuration File D:\PHP\INI\php-cgi-fcgi.ini for example. -- Richard Quadling Twitter : EE : Zend : PHPDoc @RQuadling : e-e.com/M_248814.html : bit.ly/9O8vFY : bit.ly/lFnVea -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
[PHP] Help needed with php.ini
Hi, I can't set correctly the error display and reporting properties. I don't know what i'm doing wrong. Here is the section that i modified in php.ini: - display_errors = On ; Default Value: On ; Development Value: On ; Production Value: Off display_startup_errors = On ; Default Value: Off ; Development Value: On ; Production Value: Off error_reporting = E_ALL | E_STRICT ; Default Value: E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE ; Development Value: E_ALL | E_STRICT ; Production Value: E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED And here is the output of phpinfo(): - display_errors Off Off display_startup_errors Off Off doc_rootno valueno value docref_ext no valueno value docref_root no valueno value enable_dl Off Off error_append_string no valueno value error_log no valueno value error_prepend_stringno valueno value error_reporting 22527 22527 - I'm using a default installation (using yum) of php on Fedora14. This is my development environment, and want to see all the errors on standard output. Thank you -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
[PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
Geoff Shang writes: > On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: > >> Why do you feel FB should support some antiquated browser that doesnt >> support any of the newer technoogies which enable security and more >> advanced client side rendering? > > I don't. I just don't want them to lock out my browser just because they > don't > support it. Many pages which don't work optimally under Lynx can still be > read, > which is all I'm wanting to do anyway. They need to or there can be unintentional side affects that will reflect badly on them and possibly you. If you really want a half arsed user experience then set your browser string ;) Would that not work for you? -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Richard Riley wrote: Why do you feel FB should support some antiquated browser that doesnt support any of the newer technoogies which enable security and more advanced client side rendering? I don't. I just don't want them to lock out my browser just because they don't support it. Many pages which don't work optimally under Lynx can still be read, which is all I'm wanting to do anyway. I can use the mobile site fine, but if someone posts a link to a status message or some other item on Facebook, it's to the main site and not the mobile one. I don't even bother clicking because I know Facebook won't even try to send me the page I want. Geoff. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
[PHP] Re: phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
Geoff Shang writes: > On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Tim Streater wrote: > >> Anyone whose site says that sort of crap needs a good smack. > > Don't get me started on Facebook. If they don't like your browser, they > redirect you to their"We don't support your browser page". They don't even > let > you try with your unsupported browser, which might well work if you're > clicking > on a link to a particular status update. > > Geoff. Why do you feel FB should support some antiquated browser that doesnt support any of the newer technoogies which enable security and more advanced client side rendering? If people want to use Lynx or W3m then go ahead : just dont expect everyone else to pander to your desire to stay old school. Google are now refusing to support older browsers like ie7 too. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: Re: [PHP] phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On Sun, 5 Jun 2011, Tim Streater wrote: Anyone whose site says that sort of crap needs a good smack. Don't get me started on Facebook. If they don't like your browser, they redirect you to their"We don't support your browser page". They don't even let you try with your unsupported browser, which might well work if you're clicking on a link to a particular status update. Geoff. -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: [PHP] Best authentication system
On 4 June 2011 23:21, Sean Greenslade wrote: > IIRC, there is a google code project for a php login system. You might want > to check it out. http://code.google.com/p/loginsystem-rd/ "Login system to prevent XSS, SQL Injection and CSRF" May be of interest. -- Richard Quadling Twitter : EE : Zend : PHPDoc @RQuadling : e-e.com/M_248814.html : bit.ly/9O8vFY : bit.ly/lFnVea -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Re: Re: [PHP] phpsadness - P.C. shmee seee.
On 05 Jun 2011 at 06:08, Tamara Temple wrote: > On Jun 3, 2011, at 3:52 PM, Daevid Vincent wrote: >> ...actually, I do have some good ones here: >> http://daevid.com/content/examples/procmail.php > > "It appears your browser does not support some of the advanced > features this site requires. > Please use Internet Explorer or Firefox." > ROFL. Good one. Anyone whose site says that sort of crap needs a good smack. -- Cheers -- Tim -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php