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Posts
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Posts posted by will35010
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Really nice design!
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It looks really nice. Personally, I think the buttons would be easier to find above the scrolling pictures, but that's probably just me.
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It's a nice design. Personally I think blue would stand out better for your text and buttons.
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It looks nice. I would move the sign up form. I would also put the sign form on each page that way users can sign up after they have looked around a little easily.
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Everyone really has their own favorite IDE, but I really love phpDesigner. You can try it for free full-featured for a while. It is very easy to setup and get to coding on it.
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It's a really nice design, but I would put more info on your page so people can easily determine if it fits their needs.
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It looks nice. I would keep it wordpress since wordpress is so easy to customize and extend.
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I would get rid of the landing page. The font is a little small for me, but that may be my high resolution.
It is a really nice design.
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Works fine. I didn't catch anything.
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You can probably change the below.
From:
$sql=mysql_query("select * from images");
To:
$sql=mysql_query("select * from images WHERE img_id = 'someid');
Be sure to replace someid with an actual image id.
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I don't see anything in your form that sends a POST request with the mode info.
You need something like this in your HTML form:
<input type="hidden" id="mode" name="mode" value="register" />
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What code do you have that you need help with?
There are plenty of good tutorials that you can use.
http://net.tutsplus.com/tutorials/javascript-ajax/building-a-sleek-ajax-signup-form/
It seems like you are more trying to get someone to do the work for you than to do it yourself. That's probably why nobody has replied yet. There is a section on this site where you can hire someone to do that for you.
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This code is using sessions and not cookies.
Here is a tutorial on cookies. http://w3schools.com/PHP/php_cookies.asp
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Example:
count = "0"; foreach ( $array as $value ) { // Do stuff with $value count++; } $count1 = $count - '1'; //echo next before last array echo $array['$count1;]; //echo last array echo $array['$count;];
I didn't test this, but it should be close.
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You could cycle through the array using a loop to increment a counter and then echo the string using the counter.
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I tried that with no change to the text area size...
<tr> <td colspan="4"><b>Notes:</b> <textarea style= "width: 100%" rows"10"> </textarea> </td> </tr>
You have to change the value of rows to make it change.
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Use rows. Like:
<tr> <td colspan="4" ><b>Notes:</b> <textarea style= "width: 100%" rows="10"> </textarea> </td> </tr>
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Like so:
// To send HTML mail, the Content-type header must be set $headers = 'MIME-Version: 1.0' . "\r\n"; $headers .= 'Content-type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1' . "\r\n";
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I think you have to send headers to say it's an HTML message.
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You would have to put the results in a form and submit any changes to update. Here is a decent tutorial on that http://www.freewebmasterhelp.com/tutorials/phpmysql/7.
Example:
Step 1: Retrieve Data into form for user to edit with value attribute set with initial value
Step 2: Submit form with any changes
Step 3: Write code to update those changes in the db
I hope this helps!
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We would have to see your database schema to really help and see what data is stored, but I would just write a query with a time function to only pull those events that you want. I don't know how you are storing your time values, but look at mySQL's time functions here http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/date-and-time-functions.html
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I think you want the HTML value attribute. Here is some info on it: http://www.htmlcodetutorial.com/forms/_INPUT_VALUE.html. I've always queried the database and put everything into an array and then in the value field reference that array like value='<?php echo $array[1];?>'. Maybe this will help you.
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It looks nice.