- Original Message -
From: "Brent Michalski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "james lundeen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, December 13, 2002 12:30 PM
Subject: Re: really basic question about CGI module
>
> Use the $dbh->quote function, it is part of the DBI interface.
Do you know if gtk can work under Windows?
Do you know if it creates an interface accessible for the blind?
Thank you.
Teddy,
Teddy's Center: http://teddy.fcc.ro/
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- Original Message -
From: "zentara" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, Decem
Use the $dbh->quote function, it is part of the DBI interface...
$foo = $dbh->quote($foo);
Brent
james lundeen
use place holders in your SQL statements, and let the DBD driver worry
about what is in your input.
ex:
my $sth = $dbh->prepare("INSERT INTO table (value1, value2) values (?,
?)");
$sth->execute($value1, $value2);
$sth->finish();
On Thu, 2002-12-12 at 14:41, james lundeen wrote:
> I "use CGI" i
In my experience, the only character you really have to watch out for with
mySQL is a single quote (') which you can just replace with a double-single
quote (''). So I usually do something like this on each piece of text that
I plan to write to a database:
$someInput =~ s/'/''/g;
good luck!
--
I "use CGI" in my routines very often and at times need to look at the incoming values
from forms
to make sure that they don't include "'" "," and other things that might blow up my
connection
with mysql database. Can someone please give me a nice piece of reusable code that
will read the
inco
I "use CGI" in my routines very often and at times need to look at the incoming values
from forms
to make sure that they don't include "'" "," and other things that might blow up my
connection
with mysql database. Can someone please give me a nice piece of reusable code that
will read the
inco
Actually, CGI is nothing more than a interface to communicate with the Perl
script and the webserver. The only thing CGI needs are headers. For
displaying each web page, the server must send a header, so CGI has to do
the same. Everything should work when you put a MIME type in your script,
don
tr transliterate
Tr table row
qw( :standard *Tr );
allows one to use start_Tr and end_Tr so that you don't have to pull your
hair out trying to nest method calls.
HTH
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I don't believe there is a start_tr() method, w
I don't believe there is a start_tr() method, which would explain the problem :-).
Check out the POD documentation for the CGI module by either issuing
perldoc CGI
or here:
http://search.cpan.org/author/JHI/perl-5.8.0/lib/CGI.pm
In particular seach for: "This is extremely useful for creating
"Mikeblezien" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hello,
>
> I am going to be working on a project, that will be utilizing the
GD::Graphs
> module to create various graph reports. I was hoping that someone could
point me
> to some good documentation
Greetings!
I am having some trouble with a script designed to create a table.
Here is the important part:
use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser);
use CGI qw/:standard :html center *big *strong *table *tr *td
delete_all/;
use Time::Local;
build_calendar(param('month'), param('year'));
sub build_cale
On Fri, 13 Dec 2002 09:22:01 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Anette
Seiler) wrote:
>Hi,
>
>thanks to all for answering. After discussing it with my colleagues I will
>do it in a way Peter and zentara suggested.
>
>By the way, the software is intended for librarians who want to download
>certain metada
Hi,
thanks to all for answering. After discussing it with my colleagues I will
do it in a way Peter and zentara suggested.
By the way, the software is intended for librarians who want to download
certain metadata-records from the web onto their computer for upgrading and
uploading to a library
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