After some googling, it's a browser thing, not a php thing, as Austin
pointed out. There are just rules (well, suggestions maybe) to be
aware of.
Are we flogging a dead horse here?
On 1/23/06, tedd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Austin Denyer wrote:
> >>This is a function of the way cookies work,
Austin Denyer wrote:
This is a function of the way cookies work, and is not a php issue.
Exactly. This is similar to how you can bookmark a page in one
browser, and it won't be in another browser's bookmarks. There's
nothing that says browsers should all use shared resources for
persistent d
Austin Denyer wrote:
This is a function of the way cookies work, and is not a php issue.
Exactly. This is similar to how you can bookmark a page in one browser,
and it won't be in another browser's bookmarks. There's nothing that
says browsers should all use shared resources for persistent da
Tedd,
tedd wrote:
Hi all:
While I'm sure this is obvious for most, but I just discovered this.
Using one browser (browser A) I can access one of my pages and create a
cookie with a user input value.
Then using a different browser (browser B), I can access the same page
and create anothe
Please ignore the previous e-mail: I slipped on the keyboard. :)
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David Grant
http://www.grant.org.uk/
http://pear.php.net/package/File_Ogg0.2.1
http://pear.php.net/package/File_XSPF 0.1.0
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Barry wrote:
> Austin Denyer wrote:
>> On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 16:37:12 +
>> David Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> tedd wrote:
>>>
Hi all:
While I'm sure this is obvious for most, but I just discovered this.
Using one browser (browser A) I can access one of my pages
Austin,
Austin Denyer wrote:
> On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 16:37:12 +
> David Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> tedd wrote:
>>> ...
>> Can you provide some examples for what you mean?
>
> I think he's referring to the fact that you can have one cookie in,
> say, Mozilla and another one in, say, Kon
I would have thought this was standard behaviour... Different browsers [can]
store their cookies in different locations on the drive don't they?
It's my experience that cookies are always handled autonomously and
asynchronously by browsers (ie set a cookie in one browser and another won't
see it)
Austin Denyer wrote:
On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 16:37:12 +
David Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
tedd wrote:
Hi all:
While I'm sure this is obvious for most, but I just discovered this.
Using one browser (browser A) I can access one of my pages and
create a cookie with a user input value.
Th
On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 16:37:12 +
David Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> tedd wrote:
> > Hi all:
> >
> > While I'm sure this is obvious for most, but I just discovered this.
> >
> > Using one browser (browser A) I can access one of my pages and
> > create a cookie with a user input value.
On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 11:30:32 -0500
tedd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> While I'm sure this is obvious for most, but I just discovered this.
>
> Using one browser (browser A) I can access one of my pages and create
> a cookie with a user input value.
>
> Then using a different browser (browser
Tedd,
tedd wrote:
> Hi all:
>
> While I'm sure this is obvious for most, but I just discovered this.
>
> Using one browser (browser A) I can access one of my pages and create a
> cookie with a user input value.
>
> Then using a different browser (browser B), I can access the same page
> and cre
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