> > Wouldn't
> >
> > $newUrl = 'https://' . substr( $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'], 4 )
> >
> > be a _hell_ of a lot faster?
>
> If one considers micro-seconds 'a _hell_ of a lot faster', then _maybe_
And it could be slower if you avoid sending someone from
http://example.com/ to https://ple.co
> In my opinion you should save exceptions for, well, EXCEPTIONal
> problems. Either that or you use exceptions for a large system that
> discriminates against specific types of errors and handles each error
> type in a totally different way. Can we say bloat?
Depending on the system, malformatt
On 27/06/05, Dr. Brad Lustick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm a novice trying to understand the exact construction of code for doing an
> HTTP 301 permanent redirect for a server
> coded in PHP. Could someone please tell me how I would handle the following
> example?
>
> http://www.nimblepedic.
On 27/06/05, Sebastian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> i am looking for a simple ad management app to keep track of ad
> views/impressions. i was looking at phpadsnews, but it seems way too
> much bloat of what i need i to do.
I am not aware of any such package, however you may way to keep
in mind th
I agree, your implementation is efficient. It does depend on the data
being entirely proper, however. If you can not be entirely sure (and
you should rarely be), i might add a suggestion that increases code
length, but decreases the chance of problems:
You might consider creating a function to v
Paul Nowosielski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If a have a string thats 11 characters long how can I strip off the last
> two characters?
Jay Blanchard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> $newString = substr($oldString, 0, 8);
> echo $newString;
substr's third argument is length, not position. It also a
On 27/06/05, Jasper Bryant-Greene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> John Taylor-Johnston wrote:
> > I could just change the field type. But how do you calculate it? I don't
> > see much to inspire a start. I'm not a full-time coder either. More of a
> > tinkerer. I don't want someone to do it for me, bu
On 26/06/05, Jasper Bryant-Greene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Kevin L'Huillier wrote:
> > Could you copy the relevant code into a message?
>
> Sure, either set the content-type to text/plain (to see the raw string
> rather than have the browser interpret it as HTM
> Are you viewing this via a web server? It's probably returning
> content-type text/html, which means that you might need to
> htmlspecialchars() that string.
That's what i was thinking. It looks like how some browsers
would render that string.
Could you copy the relevant code into a message?
On 24/06/05, Jason Barnett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> OK I'm pretty clear on it, but now I wonder: is variable assignment (=)
> the only place where the Zend Engine will copy a reference instead of
> reference the reference?
In PHP 4, function arguments work the same way. Unless you use the
ref
On 6/24/05, Brian Dunning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What am I doing wrong? This doesn't work. The browser does not even
> load the page, no error or anything:
The script looks fine and executed as expected on my machine.
Try executing it from the command-line. Often if nothing loads in
the
On 24/06/05, Josh Olson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> for ($i = 0; $i < count($array1); i++)
> $array1[$i][] = $array2[$i];
>
> from kevin l'huillier
That's basically what Mike wrote (only with array_push instead of []),
and Bob improved upon. And they d
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