PHP

Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, ...
kba
Mar 27, 2014 01:14
Hm, okay.
kba
Mar 27, 2014 01:13
Is there a meta chatroom about SO in general or something similiar? I can't seem to find one at least.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 03:11
@reikyoushin Most stuff you'd do other places, basic webhosting, mail server, irssi, etc.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 02:25
I see
kba
Nov 29, 2013 02:23
and what's your mhps?
kba
Nov 29, 2013 02:23
@ircmaxell What are you mining on?
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:31
You're welcome and bye. :)
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:27
@toscho Actually, you're right. I'll update the code in the answer.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:26
You might want to restate the question for future reference or delete it alltogether.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:24
Happy to hear. I'll post the result in the question and link to this chat. :)
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:20
function is_mobile() {
  $mobile_identifiers = array("Mobile","Android","BlackBerry","iPhone","Windows Phone");
  foreach ( $mobile_identifiers as $mobile_identifier ) {
      if (strstr($_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT'],$mobile_identifier))
        return true;
  }
  return false;
}
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:19
You would get the same result with:
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:17
But yeah, that should be something along the lines of foreach ( $mobile_identifiers as $mobile_identifier) { ... }.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:17
That is his current code and it is bad practice which has already been discussed.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:16
$clientview = "desktop";
foreach ( $needle as $needle ) {
    if (strstr($haystack,$needle)) {
        $clientview = "mobile";
        break;
    }
}
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:15
What you instead want to do is to break out of the foreach loop should you find a match. E.g.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:14
Assuming what you're trying to do is check if it matches one of the mobile ids you have in an array, it will always set the result to the last match. You don't want that. In that case, you might as well just use strstr on the last element of the list and be done.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:13
Okay. Also, you have a glaring architetural problem with your current foreach. Even though you might not need it after all, it's good to keep in mind so you don't make the same mistake in the future.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:11
That might be what you're trying to accomplish.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:11
That should return true if either of the words Mobile, Android, ... are in $_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT'].
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:10
preg_match("/Mobile|Android|BlackBerry|iPhone|Windows Phone/", $_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT']) could work, at least.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:10
Could you be more specific? The problem seems to be that $needle isn't an array of strings as you think it is.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:08
I assume you have some keywords in $needle and you want to check if any of them are present in your string $haystack. Is that right?
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:08
Before your foreach loop in your question, what does $needle look like?
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:07
You do seem a littel confused, indeed.
kba
Nov 29, 2013 01:06
Uncle, your terminology is a bit off. An array holds a number of strings (or any other object).
Mar 20, 2012 17:01
@PeeHaa Yes, just a slight misunderstanding on my part
Mar 20, 2012 17:00
That makes sense
Mar 20, 2012 17:00
I wouldn't want my users to accidentally encounter some obscure PHP error.
Mar 20, 2012 16:59
Wouldn't it be safer to suppress everything and only log errors?
Mar 20, 2012 16:59
E_ALL on production servers?
 

JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
kba
Mar 24, 2014 18:28
Yeah
kba
Mar 24, 2014 18:27
@Mosho A <div> is a block element, so by default it will take up the entire width of the page.
kba
Mar 24, 2014 18:26
Mosho, what do you mean "fit its contents". A <div> will automatically expand vertically to accomodate its contents.
 
Jan 19, 2012 17:04
Happy to help. Good luck with it.
Jan 19, 2012 17:04
After which you will know exactly where the problem is.
Jan 19, 2012 17:03
Gradually, you build your code again, a few lines of source code at a time, until you locate your problem.
Jan 19, 2012 17:03
When that looks at it should, you build on top of that, and see if it still works.
Jan 19, 2012 17:03
Strip it to the bone, so you can see an example where it works. This means, the direct PHP output.
Jan 19, 2012 17:02
The first step towards resolving a problem, is locating it. You're having your data interpreted both by PHP, the browser, JavaScript and the jQuery library. You have no clue where the problem is.
Jan 19, 2012 17:00
Yes, and therefore, that is not PHP's output.
Jan 19, 2012 17:00
And other than the javascript thing, it looks as it should. I don't know where that comes from.
Jan 19, 2012 17:00
Yes, exactly.
Jan 19, 2012 17:00
The browser doesn't show PHP's output, it shows its own interpretation of that output.
Jan 19, 2012 16:59
You are not looking in the source code as I've told you to - you're looking in the regular browser window.
Jan 19, 2012 16:59
Where do you see that?
Jan 19, 2012 16:58
No.
Jan 19, 2012 16:58
Not if you run it through cleanData().
Jan 19, 2012 16:57
I don't see anything wrong with that input when run through cleanData().
Jan 19, 2012 16:54
It doesn't matter what the data is displayed in. You're supposed to look at the generated HTML source code. Whatever HTML, CSS, JavaScript or otherwise you're surrounding it with will not matter at all.