Chatterbox2
-9
Strips all tags from any string.
-11
This creates a black screen if the browser is inactive for a certain amout of time. I am not sure if it works in IE too but works fine in Firefox.
-13
Just confirms if the user really wants to save the page or just hit the Ctrl+S accidentally. Works in FF maybe in IE too.
10
This simple function simply removes the character at the given index from a string.
NOTE: The count starts from 0
NOTE: The count starts from 0
10
Adds any character at the given index of a string.
NOTE: Count starts from 0
NOTE: Count starts from 0
9
This script lets you do any action the number of times specified.
7
Just a small snippet I discovered when I was tired writing somearrayname\[i\] I thought there was something like foreach in javascript but couldn't find any so why not make one?
For those foreach(){...} lovers.
Hope it makes your life easier.
For those foreach(){...} lovers.

Hope it makes your life easier.
10
This is a simple cookie object that handles some of the basic cookie functions and which is kind of like a simple cookie-object parser.
Hope you like it.
Hope you like it.
8
This function simply splits a file based on the splitter supplied and returns an array with the values. It's pretty much like the file() function. This script could be helpful in section editings.
12
Here's a little snippet I got from SitePoint that I now use all the time. Add the code below to the start of each script.
Basically, what this does is checks to see if magic_quotes_gpc() is enabled on the server, and if it is, then it gets rid of all the slashes that magic_quotes_gpc() adds to input from $_GET, $_POST and $_COOKIES globals.
It's a good snippet to use, because it negates the bad programming practices that having magic_quotes_gpc() lets you get away with, and means that you don't really on PHP to validate your input; you get to do it all yourself ;-)
Basically, what this does is checks to see if magic_quotes_gpc() is enabled on the server, and if it is, then it gets rid of all the slashes that magic_quotes_gpc() adds to input from $_GET, $_POST and $_COOKIES globals.
It's a good snippet to use, because it negates the bad programming practices that having magic_quotes_gpc() lets you get away with, and means that you don't really on PHP to validate your input; you get to do it all yourself ;-)









