--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hmmm, I would contend that PHP, particularly running inside stateless
> HTTP, doesn't know one client from another except by the code you write
> that makes it recognize them
You're exactly right.
> if you had a way to set multiple cookies (easy) and to know which
On 17 Mar 2004 Tom Rogers wrote:
> The default lifetime for session cookies is until the browser is
> closed.
Of course.
> You can run multiple sessions as long as they are to different
> domains I think. I am pretty sure PHP can only handle 1 session per
> client but you could always roll yo
Hi,
Wednesday, March 17, 2004, 11:28:04 AM, you wrote:
tcc> On 16 Mar 2004 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
tcc> I have had questions about this for a while. What is it about closing
tcc> and reopening the browser that PHP "notices" and that invalidates the
tcc> old session?
tcc> Also a comment ... I th
On 16 Mar 2004 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Sessions have to do with requests being sent by browsers to the web server. Each
> time
> you close all the windows of your browser on your computer and start the browser
> again, a new session is started. I suspect that since all your users are essenti
Damon,
Sessions have to do with requests being sent by browsers to the web server. Each time
you close all the windows of your browser on your computer and start the browser
again, a new session is started. I suspect that since all your users are essentially
using
the same web browser (since t
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