"Zilvinas Saltys" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > On Fri, 2 Jul 2004 12:21:34 -0400 > Gerard Samuel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On Friday 02 July 2004 12:12 pm, Zilvinas Saltys wrote: > > > I looked at server configurations but i couldn't find anything usefull. I > > > tried to change IE settings to accept all cookies but nothing changed. > > > > > > Maybe someone knows where's the problem.. > > > > I dont know of all the specifics of your situation, but I know when it > > happened to my code, it boiled down to a cookie problem. (I never > > experienced it first hand unless I turned off cookies in my own browser. I > > saw it was happening for other users on my code). > > So what I eventually did, was modified my code to work with browsers that do > > not store cookies (for what ever reason that may be). > > By that I mean to pass the session id in the url and in forms... > > I know i can pass the session id by url.. But this solution is ugly and hopefully not the only one there is.. > The problem is as i understand IE is not accepting the cookie. So the session id allways regenerates. Everything works fine with mozilla. > > The strangest part of the show is some pc's that have IE installed accepts those cookies. I turned 'accept ALL cookies'. Same result.. > > Maybe ... this could be a domain problem.. > > The only thing i want to know is all the truth about IE (6?) and cookies :) > > Heeelp :)
Sorry to say that but just DO NOT use cookies. You will always have problems with users having weird cookie settings in their browser. Cookies are fine for intranets where you know the infrastructure you are dealing with. Passing the session id via GET/POST may be ugly but makes you independent of the browser's cookie settings. Regards, Torsten Roehr -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php