@Stuart,
Actually that is what made me look into the PHP_EOL Stuart. Wanting
to do things right.
Did you not read my initial email? I am not suggesting anyone adopt
my code.
The question was directed to what the differences are so I COULD
learn the right way.
Being that this was something I got off a tutorial from an accredited
website, your saying that to the wrong person.
I went and read the manuals and am here now posting the question so
as to get the right direction.
I have heard the argument and actually agreed. It would be better to
use the PHP_EOL instead.
I have been directed in the right direction. So I will be changing my
code to reflect.
Thank you,
Best,
Karl
A am going to end this thread here. Since it is getting cross-post
responses.
On Jul 3, 2011, at 4:37 PM, Stuart Dallas wrote:
On Sun, Jul 3, 2011 at 10:31 PM, Karl DeSaulniers
<karl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>wrote:
Hello All,
Just so you know, this is not something I made up myself.
It was taken from an online HTML email tutorial.
Also, It has worked for years with no problem and I would still
use it,
however I found out about the PHP_EOL and was just curious as to the
difference.
You've checked that every single email it has ever sent has been
received
correctly at the destination mailbox? The internet is built on
RFCs, and
their general principle is "be strict in what you send and liberal
in what
you accept" - if it wasn't like that the internet would fall apart. I
encourage you to do your part to do things right, but it's
completely up to
you if you don't want to follow the users' manual.
-Stuart
--
Stuart Dallas
3ft9 Ltd
http://3ft9.com/
On Jul 2, 2011, at 8:28 PM, viraj wrote:
hi all,
looking at the code Karl has posted, this code bit is not going
to be
a help in setting the 'new line' character in an email body, because
it decides based on the server operating system.
if (strtoupper(substr(PHP_OS,0,5)****=='WIN')) {
$eol="\r\n";
when sending out emails, the most compatible way is to use "\r\n" as
Stuart has pointed out (plain text emails).
~viraj
On Sat, Jul 2, 2011 at 7:15 PM, Stuart Dallas <stuart@xxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Sat, Jul 2, 2011 at 9:01 AM, Karl DeSaulniers
<karl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
wrote:
Hello All,
Happy pre independence for my American PHPers. And good health
to all
others.
Have a quick question..
I have this code I use for the end of line characters used in my
mailers.
[Code]
// Is the OS Windows or Mac or Linux
if (strtoupper(substr(PHP_OS,0,5)****=='WIN')) {
$eol="\r\n";
} else if (strtoupper(substr(PHP_OS,0,5)****=='MAC')) {
$eol="\r";
} else {
$eol="\n";
}
[End Code]
Does this suffice or should I be using the php supplied end of
line?
$eol=PHP_EOL;
Or do these do the same thing?
What advantages over the code I use does the PHP_EOL have?
Or does it not matter with these and either are good to go?
It seems to me that they do the same thing.. am I on the right
track or
missing something?
Is there any other OS's that are not WIN or MAC and use the
"\r" or
"\r\n"
?
If their are, then I can see an advantage of using the PHP_EOL.
Like I said, just a quick question. ;)
When you say "mailers" are you talking about emails? If so then you
should
be using "\r\n" at all times since that's what numerous email-
related
RFCs
specify. If you use anything else then you may find your email gets
rejected
by strictly implemented mail servers (rare these days, but it
happens).
Incidentally, CR only applies to Mac OS9 and earlier. OSX uses
LF due to
its
BSD roots. For a near-complete list, see "Representations" here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/**Newline<http://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Newline>
.
-Stuart
--
Stuart Dallas
3ft9 Ltd
http://3ft9.com/
Karl DeSaulniers
Design Drumm
http://designdrumm.com
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Karl DeSaulniers
Design Drumm
http://designdrumm.com
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