ChaoZ Inferno wrote:
> Well, firstly, it ain't CGI, it's network programming.
if it ain't, why are you posting to a cgi list?
http://learn.perl.org/ - choose another list.
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or addressing this
problem. Seems like i have to tackle the problem from another perspective
then.
Thanks! Advice still welcome!
- Original Message -
From: "drieux" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "cgi cgi-list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 22, 2002 10:06 PM
On Wednesday, May 22, 2002, at 01:07 , ChaoZ InferNo wrote:
[..]
> I want to print out a variable to my client over the internet, but would
> like to use syswrite and sysread would help to reduce mistakes in EOF
> characters.
[..]
I back felix's main line - since sysread/syswrite are for
acces
on Wed, 22 May 2002 09:54:33 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chaoz
Inferno) wrote:
> Well, the problem is that I have to print an html header back to
> the client, and the usual print, I am getting irregular response?
I never had any problems using 'print', in combination with the CGI.pm
module on an
Well, the problem is that I have to print an html header back to the client,
and the usual print, I am getting irregular response?
Thus, I am hoping to use the sysread and syswrite command to help me pass
the html message over to prevent any EOF characters problem?
This is a rather sensitive
on Wed, 22 May 2002 08:07:07 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chaoz
Inferno) wrote:
> I want to print out a variable to my client over the internet, but
> would like to use syswrite and sysread would help to reduce
> mistakes in EOF characters.
Why do you think that?
> #!/usr/bin/perl
> my $buffer;
>
Hi all,
I am having some problem with sysread and syswrite. Example:-
I want to print out a variable to my client over the internet, but would
like to use syswrite and sysread would help to reduce mistakes in EOF
characters.
#!/usr/bin/perl
my $buffer;
my $test = "hello, how do