> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jim Lucas [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2008 11:43 AM
> To: Chrome
> Cc: 'Stut'; 'Andrew Ballard'; 'Jay Moore'; php-general@lists.php.net
> Subject: Re: [PHP] Output text status on a long class
> 
> Chrome wrote:
> >> On 14 Oct 2008, at 16:51, Chrome wrote:
> >>> For the record I have included a 256 char long whitespace string
> >>> along with any prospective output but still no joy
> >>>
> >>> Opera 9.60 reliably informs me it's received 258 bytes but
displays
> >>> nothing
> >>>
> >>> I'll carry on with this for a little before blaming the browsers
> >>> (testing also in FF3) and putting in a 'This is going to take
> bloody
> >>> ages' note :)
> >> My initial response was based on it being a CLI script in which
case
> >> my advice would have been enough. However in your case there are
> other
> >> buffers in play which could affect the output.
> >>
> >> How is your output formatted? Browsers won't necessarily display
> >> content until they get closing tags. This is probably the issue
> you're
> >> running into.
> >
> > The output is [currently] plain text only.  Maybe it would help if I
> added
> > the standard HTML stuff too I'll have more luck
> >
> > I'll try that in a little bit but food first :)
> >
> > Thanks for the input
> 
> Also, a setting to check it to make sure that output_buffering, in the
> PHP.ini, is set to off.  I think the default is 4096bytes.  You'll not
> want it
> to do that.  Once you change that, restart apache/iis/etc...

OP wrote: "Thanks for the input (and this may be something to do with
the server (which I didn't set up))"

I'm thinking maybe they have no control over any INI settings that
cannot be changed programmatically on a per-script basis.


Todd Boyd
Web Programmer

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