> > Anything that doesn't use the word 'flava' :)
> What if I name all my variables after Rocky characters? ;)
Hey! You stole my method! Actually, mine are Rocky and
Bullwinkle, but still! :p
thnx,
Chris
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Jay Blanchard wrote:
Anything that doesn't use the word 'flava' :)
What if I name all my variables after Rocky characters? ;)
Now for the real can of worms...
On odd lines, I use spaces, and on even lines, I use tabs.
The above is an attempt at humor.
The below is an attempt at addressing the ques
Chapter 1 of Advanced PHP Programming, by George Schlossnagle, ISBN
0-672-32561-6.
http://www.blueshoes.org/en/developer/coding_guidelines/
> -Original Message-
> So I'm sitting here writing code and I'm thinking about my own style of
> writing
> and formatting my php code(I use a mix of
[snip]
So I'm sitting here writing code and I'm thinking about my own style of
writing
and formatting my php code(I use a mix of the pear standard and my own
flava).
What else do you guy's use?
What style should I base my code formatting on in order to be accepted
widely by
the php community at la
Hi Jay:
On Fri, Jul 12, 2002 at 08:40:31AM -0500, Jay Blanchard wrote:
>
> The agent selects a referral which is processed by an intermediary
> script which sets a flag in the database saying that "this agent" is, has,or
> will be contacting this referral (to prevent duplicate contact). Then thi
I see no problems whatsoever in utilizing an intermediary script to do processing of
information. However, there IS a problem when this script sets flags that are
unwanted by the client. An example of a good intermediary script application would be
as below.
Person A and Person B both remote
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