Re: Php installations [message #177234 is a reply to message #177232] |
Thu, 01 March 2012 12:55 |
The Natural Philosoph
Messages: 993 Registered: September 2010
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Senior Member |
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Captain Paralytic wrote:
> On Mar 1, 11:22 am, The Natural Philosopher <t...@invalid.invalid>
> wrote:
>> Captain Paralytic wrote:
>>> On Feb 28, 12:01 pm, Jerry Stuckle <jstuck...@attglobal.net> wrote:
>>>> On 2/28/2012 4:36 AM, Michael Vilain wrote:
>>>> > In article
>>>> > <6fa4b876-9581-4db0-8917-8ef51c08d...@l14g2000vbe.googlegroups.com>,
>>>> > Sunnny<p.shridhar2...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> >> Hi everyone..i m a new php geek.i tried installing php as wamp..one
>>>> >> problem i have is ..i m unable to load extensions of php like mysql
>>>> >> and mysqli..some time they get loaded and some the extensions fail to
>>>> >> work..i tried installing other versions but nothing is shown
>>>> > What log files have you looked at? On Linux boxes, there are log files
>>>> > you can look at that will tell you what didn't load, etc. Have no clue
>>>> > what or where to look in Windows since php is primarily a Linux/UNIX
>>>> > technology.
>>>> > Have you been able to install MySQL and run the install test
>>>> > successfully? That would be my first step.
>>>> No, PHP is a platform independent technology. And it's logs on Windows
>>> its logs!
>> it logs, surely.
>
> No, he is saying that the logs belonging to php are located in the
> same place as they would be in linux (i.e. where you state they should
> be in the php.ini file). Logs belonging to is a possessive and
> possessive its has no apostophe, although it does have an s.
>
Ok, so he has completly arsed teh punctioant and it SHOUD read
"No, PHP is a platform independent technology, and its logs on Windows
(are a completely platform independent technology)."
It still BARELY makes sense.
Imagine if the grammatical rules of English were as strictly enforced as
a C compiler..we might actually see coherent unambiguous universally
parse-able sentences..
--
To people who know nothing, anything is possible.
To people who know too much, it is a sad fact
that they know how little is really possible -
and how hard it is to achieve it.
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