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2
Date Submitted Tue. Apr. 10th, 2007 9:39 PM
Revision 1
Helper snowdonkey
Tags Form | PHP | Validate
Comments 3 comments
The following script is a single interface for pre-validating any HTML form. It lets you validate your form data the way you want, while handling the rudimentary tasks itself.

1) Change just one variable to make it work with $_GET or $_POST or $_REQUEST.

2) Name which elements are 'required' all at once in a hidden HTML text input.

3) Easily provide field descriptions in hidden HTML text inputs that you can use to print error statements.

4) Call a single function to print out error statements that you can easily style with CSS.

5) It automatically checks if fields marked 'required' have been filled out.

Most of the pre-validation code is from PHP 5: Unleashed by Sams Publishing. I found it extremely useful for a recent project. Sharing it here, I removed some unnecessary functions, and tried to simplify some points.

All the comments are my own; hopefully I provided more than enough explanation.
2
Date Submitted Wed. Nov. 7th, 2007 2:45 PM
Revision 1
Helper Idlemind
Tags PHP
Comments 2 comments
If it's a .php page, you can simply include this file where you want a hit counter to appear.

One file - text output. Very simple, very easy. Based off the filename of the page (creates a pagename.counter file to hold the count).
(No use for it myself - made it for a friend).
2
Date Submitted Thu. Oct. 18th, 2007 8:32 AM
Revision 1
Beginner Tr0y
Tags PHP
Comments 0 comments
Use this to print alternating values from an array.

It cycles through a series of values based on an iteration number.

For example, you could use this for alternating background colors.
3
Date Submitted Thu. Mar. 6th, 2008 3:09 AM
Revision 1
Scripter Fordiman
Tags JavaScript | parse_url | PHP
Comments 0 comments
Simple. It's parse_url, from PHP, implemented in Javascript. Seen a lot of similar ones around the web, but they were all bulky code and none of them took advantage of the RegEx parser in JS.

Applied as a member of the String prototype, so just call as myURL.parseURL(); Will return a named object with naming identical to that of PHP's function.

Additional: if first argument is present, will break the querystring up into name/value pairs, unescaped, and return that instead of the raw querystriing.
3
Date Submitted Tue. Nov. 13th, 2007 12:37 PM
Revision 1
Beginner cyberhitesh
Tags Online | PHP | PHP5 | Storage | Unlimited
Comments 0 comments
Software Requirements:

Crypt_HMAC:
http://pear.php.net/package/Crypt_HMAC
HTTP_REQUEST:
http://pear.php.net/package/HTTP_Request
PEAR:
http://pear.php.net/
4
Date Submitted Tue. Sep. 4th, 2007 5:21 PM
Revision 1
Helper explode
Tags "credit card" | Class | PHP
Comments 0 comments
This is a simple credit card validation class that you can check for most issues before you process you form through paypal, authorize.net, or anywhere else. This also uses my Simple Error Class, the error class is required for this.
4
Date Submitted Fri. Jun. 9th, 2006 11:40 AM
Revision 1
Coder mattrmiller
Tags Array | find | PHP | search
Comments 0 comments
A simple search array example.
5
Date Submitted Wed. Oct. 11th, 2006 7:58 AM
Revision 1
Scripter ctiggerf
Tags PHP | String
Comments 3 comments
Two very usefull functions to have around.

(note: dollarfy requires commify to work)
5
Date Submitted Sun. May. 20th, 2007 10:58 PM
Revision 1
Scripter SecondV
Tags allow | deny | DOMAIN | PHP | post
Comments 3 comments
This small snippet will not allow _POST requests from a 'foreign' domain. It relies on the HTTP_REFERER variable.
5
Date Submitted Thu. Sep. 27th, 2007 8:02 AM
Revision 1
Scripter Fordiman
Tags JavaScript | PHP | Prototype | serialize
Comments 2 comments
This is the final version of my Javascript serializer targetted at PHP.

The point:
Objects are most easily passed over the network as serialized strings. Between serialization and unserialization, serialization is by far the easier of the two. Since object passing can sometimes be a process-hungry thing, we want to do things as quickly as possible.

My solution is to always do the hard part in compiled code, while doing the easy part in script. That is, whichever way you're passing an Object, you want to pass it in a natively decoded format for the target.

Since I work mostly in PHP, this meant writing a module that would be able to generate a string that can be decoded with PHP's unserialize() function into a PHP Associative Array (or other applicable type).

Notes:
This lib REQUIRES the Prototype lib. You can hack prototype out of it, of course (by replacing the references to Object.extend() with explicit assignments), but I can't imagine why you'd want to bother; it's used mostly with Ajax.Request anyway.

Previous versions of this code would add the .toPHP() member to the Object prototype. After trying to enumerate things, I found that this is a REALLY bad thing to do, as toPHP springs up where it's not wanted in ALL objects. As a result, I've opted to go the Prototype route and apply it as a member of the Object object.

Please note that if you pass a serialized string to PHP via GET or POST, you'll need to stripslashes() before unserialization.



Javascript sample of use:

var myObject = {
name:'value',
test:['Array','of','strings'],
bool:false,
timestamp: new Date(),
float: 3.1415926539,
number: 42,
func: function () {
alert('Member functions are always omitted from serialization');
}
}
alert(Object.toPHP(myObject));

Output:
a:7:{s:4:"name";s:5:"value";s:4:"test";a:3:{i:0;s:5:"Array";i:1;s:2:"of";i:2;s:7:"strings";}s:4:"bool";b:0;s:9:"timestamp";i:1190897619824;s:5:"float";d:3.1415926539;s:6:"number";i:42;s:4:"func";null}


Sample of subsequent unserialization in PHP (passed via POST as 'myobject')

$myObject=unserialize(stripslashes($_POST['myobject']));
var_dump($myObject);

Output:
array(7) {
["name"]=>
string(5) "value"
["test"]=>
array(3) {
[0]=>
string(5) "Array"
[1]=>
string(2) "of"
[2]=>
string(7) "strings"
}
["bool"]=>
bool(false)
["timestamp"]=>
int(1192296601)
["float"]=>
float(3.1415926539)
["number"]=>
int(42)
["func"]=>
NULL
}
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