Hey! Pretty good.. the upgraded security seems to have worked, there was an attempt overnight from an IP address in Saudi Arabia, I guess we're popular..
Quick question - the SALT generator you showed me generates a bunch of special characters and my MySQL table (VARCHAR column) does not seem to like them if I directly update a row..
And I am referring to when I update a row in PHPMyAdmin
Okay..
Can you suggest maybe a strong salt that doesn't use special characters? I mean, I seldom if ever make changes directly in phpMyAdmin.. perhaps I should just leave it as is? Getting ready to open the doors to the users again, trying to fix little details
I'm wondering if there is some way I can create and test php programs without having to ftp my file to a php server everytime I want to save. I want to make acouple programs in solely php (no html) and I want to test the progress as I develop it....is there a program I can use or something?
it seems like installing either of those will make my windows machine a webserver so that a user can enter my IP address and get to a webpage....is this true?
Now it says: "Unable to initialize module. Module compiled with module API=20060613. PHP compiled with module API=20090626. These options need to match"
I look php_mssql.dll from a PHP 5.2 installation
Maybe I can't do that
Installing extensions in PHP is annoying
Why can't you just include a dll or something and be done with it
It seems like half the extensions out there require you to recompile PHP.
// Microsoft SQL Server using the SQL Native Client 10.0 ODBC Driver - allows connection to SQL 7, 2000, 2005 and 2008
$connection = odbc_connect("Driver={SQL Server Native Client 10.0};Server=$server;Database=$database;", $user, $password);
Well, then you have two options. Install 5.2.x and the native driver, or write a compat layer where you redefine the mssql functions in terms of odbc functions
UTF-16 (16-bit Unicode Transformation Format) is a character encoding for Unicode capable of encoding 1,112,064 numbers (called code points) in the Unicode code space from 0 to 0x10FFFF. It produces a variable-length result of either one or two 16-bit code units per code point.
The older UCS-2 (2-byte Universal Character Set) is a similar character encoding that was superseded by UTF-16 in version 2.0 of the Unicode standard in July 1996.. It produces a fixed-length format by simply using the code point as the 16-bit code unit and produces exactly the same result as UTF-16 for 63,488 code ...
which would be a catch-all, since it doesn't depend on anything other than the fuynction being installed...
as far as should it be a native function (working with bit/byte level data), it's up for debate. It isn't the most common thing to do in PHP, so is it really worth extending the language for (and adding bloat to an already bloated language)...