ews [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Sunday, December 22, 2002 9:44 AM
> To: Iain Lang
> Cc: Alan McDonald; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: How long is my piece of string?
>
>
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Iain Lang wrote:
> > .
> >
+1100, Alan McDonald wrote:
You need indexes as soon as (or rather just before) they provide a
performance difference.
Alan
-Original Message-
From: Iain Lang [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, 22 December 2002 11:15 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: How long is my piece of string?
.
.
Dear List,
I'm using php & MySQL for a cycling club website, results, guest-book,
events and so on. I've just started and have faithfully created indices
all over the place.
At present, we have less than 400 records, be they of members, of image
URLs, whatever. Each year will, I expect, cr
.
Could we see this php routine, please? Or can you post it to a newsgroup?
Yooors,
Iain Lang.
At 18:23 15/10/02 -0400, Serge Paquin wrote:
I have written a very poor and inflexable PHP function to do this outside
the database. I have not played with doing my own functions in mySQL but
your
.
If I may beg the List's tolerance for a while -
The practice of putting responses before the (often wildly varied and
prolix) text prompting that response means that those whose eyesight is not
what it used to be, if indeed it yet remains, do not have to wait for aeons
as speech software gri
from anything other than its installed c:\ drive.
Round about here is where I run out of intelligent questions (that is, if
the above were intelligent).
In the usual way of things, after a couple of weeks' use and experimenting,
I expect I'll cringe at the naive content of this m