jefkin
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Agreed Ken, That's a lot easier to understand and maintain. Jeff
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Updating a session without ending it first
jefkin replied to heartonsleeve's topic in PHP Coding Help
More appropriate to post the code that changes the user's image. Probably all you need to do as the last thing in the part that verifies the new image is set $_SESSION['profile_pic'] to their new image. then just to be safe call: session_write_close(); and refresh the page to wherever you need it. Jeff -
I've seen this error many times. It means that the variable you sent to the foreach isn't an array. This can usually be fixed by changing code like [code] if ($myCond) { $myArray = somefunc(); } foreach ($myArray as $elem) { // .... } [/code] into code with a preset default for the var (an empty array). [code] $myArray = array(); [/code] Trust me on this, that eror only occurs when some path to your foreach doesn't let the variable become an array. Jeff
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you can create an access method in class b class B extends A { /// your stuff function A_Hello() { parent::sayHello(); } } For a non invasive means, if A's sayHello method doesn't involve any class variables, you can say A::sayHello(); But the first is probaly a safer bet for anything non-trivial, and deffinitely for any method that uses class variables (instance variable). Sometimes Global class variables will be okay. So, the absolute safest way is the first one. Use that if at all possible. Jeff
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If I understand your problem, then replaceing your quoted code with my sample should work for you. So, How about foreach? And, there's no need for the $daysMale and $daysFemale array (along with some other stuff) [code] // your database fetch, assuming you still build $monMaleAge, $tueMaleAge, etc... $days = array('mon', 'tue', 'wed', 'thu', 'fri', 'sat', 'sun'); $ages = array('Teen' => 'teen', '18+' => '18', '21+' => '21'); foreach ($days as $day) { $varDB = "{$day}MaleAge"; $daysMaleImage[$day] = "<img src=\"images/M{$ages[$$var]}.gif\" width=\"21\" height=\"18\" />"; $varDB = "{$day}FemaleAge"; $daysFemaleImage[$day] = "<img src=\"images/F{$ages[$$var]}.gif\" width=\"21\" height=\"18\" />"; } // to output your built arrays: echo "<table><tr><th>Day</th><th>Male</th><th>Female</th></tr>\n"; foreach ($days as $day) { echo "<tr><td>$day</td><td>{$daysMaleImage[$day]}</td><td>{$daysFemaleImage[$day]}</td></tr>\n"; } echo "</table>\n"; [/code] If this doesn't do quite what you want, it should be close, though, I didn't actually test it. Jeff
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Um, what about 37 do you want 37.00 or 37.0 ??? Do you mean signifigant figures? How about .00002323 do you want .000 or do you want .0000232 round() provides some functionality you might find useful. Jeff
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[code] $sigfig = 2; for ($i = 2; $i < 15; $i ++) // use a bigger number if 15 is too small { $var = "col$i"; // store the working var name col2, col3, etc... $$var = round($$var, $sigfig); // set and round the variable named 'col2', 'col3', etc... } [/code] Jeff
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Hi lJesterl change the echo code bit from: [code] for ($i=0; $i <$num_results; $i++) { $row = mysql_fetch_array($result); echo"<tr>"; echo"<td>"; echo ($row["ip"]); echo"</td>"; echo"<td>"; echo ($row["entries"]); echo"</td>"; echo"</tr>"; } [/code] to [code] for ($i=0; $i <$num_results; $i++) { $row = mysql_fetch_array($result); $iplist .= "<tr><td>{$row['ip']}</td><td>{$row["entries"]}</td></tr>"; } [/code] Jeff
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Hi bob_the_builder, trim() only removes leading and trailing spaces from the string, so: " Hello World " is changed to "Hello World" And " MY name is Jeff " becomes "MY name is Jeff" As for your second question, if your data is numeric, and simple, such as $_SESSION['user_id'] as an integer, then there's no need to 'clean' it. Generally if you're passing complicated data, including spaces, or funky chars, then you use $my_url = "index.php?action=user&user_id={$_SESSION['user_id']}&my_funky_chars=" . urlencode($_SESSION['funky_chars']); Doe that cover it ? Jeff
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For a one time fix for your articles, first look in the database and find out your authorid. For my example, I'm assuming your authorid is 133, if you have a different one (probably) just change the SQL below to use your number instead of 133. then from mysql or from MysqlAdmin of your favorite flavor, run this command: [code] UPDATE articles SET visible = 'Y' WHERE authorid = 133; [/code] This will enable all your articles. HTH Jeff
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Hi Tunnleram, looks like you need to change this line: [code] $query = "INSERT INTO user (host, user, password, select_priv, insert_priv, update_ priv) VALUES ('localhost', '$username', PASSWORD('$password'), 'Y', 'Y', 'Y')"; [/code] into this: [code] $query = "INSERT INTO user (host, user, password, select_priv, insert_priv, update_priv) VALUES ('localhost', '$username', PASSWORD('$password'), 'Y', 'Y', 'Y')"; ^^^^^^^^^^^ [/code] The 'update_' and the 'priv' need to go together!! Jeff
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Slight typo, I think onlyican, [quote author=onlyican link=topic=107532.msg431588#msg431588 date=1157893699] [code] <?php function getImap() { global $servername; global $username; global $password; $mbox = imap_open("{".$servername.":110/pop3/notls}INBOX", $username, $password); return $mbox; } $mbox = getImap(); $mcheck = imap_check($mbox); $mnum = $mcheck->Nmsgs; $overview = imap_fetch_overview($mbox, "1:$mnum", 0); ?> [/code] [/quote]
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A minor suggestion, onlyican, If you want to avoid javascript, You could save the entered data in a mysql table, then let the browser load right on top. Once the user's selected the recipient, you can retrieve it. Another way that might fit the bill better: To acomplish almost the same thing you could use sessions. So once they hit the 'select user' button or whatever, it saves the entered stuff in the session and opens the recipient chooser page. The chooser page let's them pick and when they resubmit, grab their stored session data and display it along with the user. HTH Jeff
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to echo it, change this: [code] while ( $arr = mysql_fetch_array($res) ) eval($arr[0]); [/code] to this: [code] while ($arr = mysql_fetch_array($res)) { echo "<pre>{$arr[0]}</pre>\n"; eval($arr[0]); } [/code] It will still die at the same place, but your ouput should include a bunch of *whatevers* you keep in 'Conf' field in the database table Modules. when it dies, look at the last output before the death, and count down to line 13... That's your error. Jeff
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You may be right tleisher, but without his code, I just guessed that he's having a problem retrieving the '\' on the php side. before he could get to it with a str_replace(). Maybe I missunderstood. If so, appologies rshadarack. Otherwise, I'm thinking the problem is he's got magic_quotes or some such set to muddle with his form input strings. Like I said, could be wrong... Jeff