Re: A question on the term CFG.

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Well if you're using 4.3.10 as you said in your other post then __autoload is not supported anyway. A grep on autoload would've turned it up.

I'm assuming you've tried a grep for "CFG" to find the declaration?

Jasper


wayne wrote:
Hi Jasper,
I thought about this and so I did a grep on "autoload"
and came up empty. Is there a different way of checking
for the magic function?
Thanks

On Mon, 2005-08-08 at 08:24 +1200, Jasper Bryant-Greene wrote:

Or if it's PHP 5 they might be using an __autoload() magic function which gets called whenever a class that isn't declared is instantiated. That function could be require()ing another file.

Jasper


Chris wrote:

That isn't created by PHP, it must be declared in the code somewhere.

Maybe there is an auto_prepend_file set?

http://www.php.net/manual/en/ini.core.php#ini.auto-prepend-file

Chris

wayne wrote:


First, I'm new to PHP. I have a script that
has a piece of code that looks like this -
require_once($CFG->wwwroot . '/lib/mylib.php');
My question is this, I'm trying to find out
how the class $CGF was initiated.There are no
include or require statement before the statement.
Is $CFG a global variable? If how does it get
initiated?
Tnaks.









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