5
This detects screen resolution using javascript and makes it available to php by way of cookies.
3
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).
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).
3
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/
Crypt_HMAC:
http://pear.php.net/package/Crypt_HMAC
HTTP_REQUEST:
http://pear.php.net/package/HTTP_Request
PEAR:
http://pear.php.net/
2
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.
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.
0
A simple function (with support) that can provide the backbone to any templating system.









