Ben -- ...and then Ben Huyghebaert said... % % Thanks but I don't think that will work because as someone pointed out my foreach loop leaves me with only the last elements of @access.
Well, it did that as you wrote it; you looped through the whole file and
*then* started any comparing.
I was afraid you wouldn't get it on the first pass, but didn't follow
up, since the explanation as well as the rewrite say the same thing as
I redundantly would. Maybe not so redundantly, though...
% I need it to give me all the elements in two @s I'll see if I can figure it out
maybe someone know the best way?
Have you actually tried it? Try David's code and see what you get.
I think you'll find that yours does
loop through whole file
capture name, password
compare name, password to hash
while his does
loop through whole file
capture name, password
compare name, password to hash
thus letting you check every user instead of only the last one.
HTH & HAND
:-D
--
David T-G * It's easier to fight for one's principles
(play) [EMAIL PROTECTED] * than to live up to them. -- fortune cookie
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