Hi,

I think it's one of the "magic_quotes" features that does this. One
possibility would be to turn it off, and be sure to escape your quotes by
transforming them into double-quotes before sending them to Oracle.

"Christoph Kempen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a écrit dans le message news:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi,

I used to work with PHP/mysql.. But since a few weeks we have an oracle
server :-)

1 problem occured with the migration...

If some text is passed through a html-form all the qoutes have a slash in
fromt of them... This is not a problem with mysql, since mysql uses that
slash for inserting a qoute in the table. But in oracle this is not a slash,
but a qoute...

For example:

    Išts a test                 php:    I\šts a test

But oracle wants:       Iššts a test

Is there a easy way for converting this. Otherwise I have to write a
function that filters them out :-(

Thanx,

Christoph Kempen




-- 
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To contact the list administrators, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to