@tereško: sorry I really tried all things to send mail with smtp, but nothing worked. I don't work this for some company or anything else but for myself, so I need a little help. Thank you for understanding ;)
@BBeta if you really have some experience in C/C++ then you do not need an in-depth book. What you really need is something that lets you see how language is used, and the rest of it will be just using php manual , googling and writing code
@user1257255 if you think that you are good enough php to use a framework, then you SHOULD know how to debug stuff already
@tereško: if you think that yours 24.1k reputation means you are leader of the world, then you don't have to be annoying with your really smart answers. Just remember yourself when you needed help at the start of your programming carrier. Why don't you try to help me instead of being sarcastic?
@tereško yeah, ok i am first creating a request to api to get a secret encrypted value that has username stored in it. i am storing that key in cookie than after that sending that cookie value via jquery ajax request to api server to authenticate user and get data.
it will explain what prepared statements are and why they actually protect you against 1st order SQL injections
@AbhishekGahlot if I steal the cookie , what will happen ? Also, you JS should not access cookies. For it to do so, you cannot set the as HTTP-Only, which also makes the code susceptible to XSS
If your application does not catch the exception thrown from the PDO constructor, the default action taken by the zend engine is to terminate the script and display a back trace. This back trace will likely reveal the full database connection details, including the username and password. It is your responsibility to catch this exception, either explicitly (via a catch statement) or implicitly via set_exception_handler().
@EliteGamer it provides same functionality as PDO, but MySQLi is tied to single RDBMS and the way to change error reporting is buried deep in documentation
@MadaraUchiha @salathe had php.net's styling changed so that the red box that lets users know about mysql_*'s deprecation is actually red again (with the new layout it was purple)... anyways, just thought I'd let you know :P
> My name is Jennifer Ahsan, I am an account officer in a bank here in the United Kingdom. I am contacting you for a business transfer of a huge sum of money from a deceased account. Can I trust you?
@EliteGamer it provides same functionality as PDO, but MySQLi is tied to single RDBMS and the way to change error reporting is buried deep in documentation
@EliteGamer In a nutshell: MySQLi is very powerful, and gives you absolute control over every aspect of your database manipulation. PDO can't do some of the things that MySQLi can, but it is way easier to use and I would bet $100 that you don't need any of the features that it doesn't have. In the general way of things, use PDO. If you need a feature that only MySQLi provides you will already know that you need MySQLi for that specific task.
It works for removing non-numerics from a string, but that's not what you want, you want to prevent SQL injection. The way to do that is to use prepared statements.
Glad to hear thoughts on this, but I use prepared statements even when I generate the variables, just in case somehow the variable information is ever from the user in some future revision.