Re: Serve It Up

2002-11-23 Thread Bruce Johnson
On Friday, November 22, 2002, at 10:47 PM, Michael Richardson wrote: once I get there the problems begin. This is what I have right now: UW PICO(tm)File:httpd.confModified I then do ^W(ctrl-W) to get the search line. After this, I type in php and then hit enter. It then

Serve It Up

2002-11-22 Thread Michael Richardson
Dear List, I'm sure alot of you have read the Serve it up article in the November 2002 ish of MacWorld. They give step by step instructions to set up a web server on your mac. The first step involves turning on the the php function so that Apache loads the php module on start up. Supposedly

Re: Serve It Up

2002-11-22 Thread Joe Ellis
:31 PM Subject: Serve It Up Dear List, I'm sure alot of you have read the Serve it up article in the November 2002 ish of MacWorld. They give step by step instructions to set up a web server on your mac. The first step involves turning on the the php function so that Apache loads the php

Re: Serve It Up

2002-11-22 Thread Bruce Johnson
Michael Richardson wrote: Supposedly, I can go into the Unix text editor(PICO), press ctrl-W to open the command line, and then type php. When you hit the return key, the cursor should land on the line #LoadModule php4_module libexec/httpd/libphp4.so. Instead of this, however, I get

Re: Serve It Up

2002-11-22 Thread Michael Richardson
--- Bruce Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Michael Richardson wrote: Supposedly, I can go into the Unix text editor(PICO), press ctrl-W to open the command line, and then type php. When you hit the return key, the cursor should land on the line #LoadModule php4_module

Re: Serve It Up

2002-11-22 Thread Jeremy Derr
On Friday, November 22, 2002, at 12:31 PM, Michael Richardson wrote: Supposedly, I can go into the Unix text editor(PICO), press ctrl-W to open the command line, and then type php. When you hit the return key, the cursor should land on the line #LoadModule php4_module

Re: Serve It Up

2002-11-22 Thread Michael Richardson
--- Jeremy Derr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: pico is -a- unix text editor. there are many others, several of which are included with OS X. emacs and vi are just a couple. being an avid pico user, 'command not found' doesn't sound like a pico error. once you open the Terminal, you have