On Friday, June 20, 2003, at 11:55 AM, David Blomstrom wrote:
Hm... it would be nice if I could use a search and replace
function, but that would be tricky. If I replaced every instance of
.htm"> with .php">, then that would also change links to other
websites. For example...
If /all/ your
Hi Steve
Comments inline...
On 20 Jun,2003 at 10:06 Steve B. wrote:
> I've heard of a Apache server setting or update that makes for example:
>
> .com/shoes.html returns page /index.php?site=shoes
> or
> .com/shoes.html returns page /shoes.php
>
See my previous post on this thread ... the mo
I've heard of a Apache server setting or update that makes for example:
.com/shoes.html returns page /index.php?site=shoes
or
.com/shoes.html returns page /shoes.php
Just like you have virtual folders you can have wildcard serach and replaced virtual
file names.
I believe this would solve your
At 02:19 PM 6/20/2003 +0200, Thorsten Körner wrote:
"This will run, and I think almost without problems. But IMHO it makes no
sense. And I don't know, if all the searchengines out there will be able or
willing to read *.php files (google works fine)."
Are you saying that some search engines might
Hi David
Am Freitag, 20. Juni 2003 04:13 schrieb David Blomstrom:
> I joined this list a few weeks ago because I wanted to learn about php.
> Unfortunately, I still haven't found time to study it in any depth. Thus,
> my question might be a bit amateurish, but it's fairly urgent, so I'd
> appreciat
Hi David
Comments inline...
On Thu,Jun 19, 2003 at 08:31:40PM -0700, David Blomstrom wrote :
> At 09:16 PM 6/19/2003 -0500, Joshua Stein wrote:
>
> I don't know exactly what you mean, but I just renamed one of my pages
> (using Dreamweaver) with a .php extension, previewed it in Mozilla, and
At 09:16 PM 6/19/2003 -0500, Joshua Stein wrote:
"it won't cause any problems. you'll have the very small overhead of
having to run every static page through php's parser, but if you're going
to have php in these pages in the future it doesn't really matter."
> Also, I'm thinking of naming all
You can easily add the .php extension to any .htm(l) page that you have
with no worries as long as you have PHP installed and configured
properly.
The only "problem" is that page load will be SLIGHTLY slower since PHP
will search all .php pages for PHP code to evaluate. Upon finding none,
it will
> I'd like to get some feedback from this forum. Do you agree that a page
> without php functions or server side includes can be put online with either
> a .htm or .php function? If I never add a php function to a page with a
> .php extension, could that cause some kind of problems?
it won't ca