Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Its so quite here today!
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Chat with iBot - Our RSS Robot Girl Its so quite here today! Post 302088178 by tayyabq8 on Sunday 10th of September 2006 04:15:57 AM
Old 09-10-2006
Its so quite here today!

Hi Gollum,

Gud morning. Today here at UNIX.COM its so quite, do you know the reason?

Cheers,
Tayyab
 

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Get date one month from today

I need to get the date one month in the future from today - or 30 days from today etc... I need this to work all year around - I cannot find anything to solve this issue in the search / faqs etc.... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: frustrated1
5 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Files generated today

I would like to find the Files which are generated today in the current directory: I use the commad ls -lrt * | egrep " `date "+%b"` * `date "+%d"` to acheive this. Is there any better way to acquire the same. Multiple answers will be great. Thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kusathy
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

meaning of today=${1:-${today}}

what does today=${1:-${today}} mean??? I saw a script which has these two lines: today=`date '+%y%m%d'` today=${1:-${today}} but both gives the same value for $today user:/export/home/user>today=`date '+%y%m%d'` user:/export/home/user>echo $today 120326... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vidhyaprakash
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Check, if date is not today

hello, in a file exist entries in date format YYYYMMDD. i want to find out, if there are dates, which isn't today's date. file: date example text 20140714 <= not today's date 20140715 <= not today's date 20140716 <= today's date my idea is to use Perderabo's datecalc ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bora99
2 Replies
FGETSS(3)								 1								 FGETSS(3)

fgetss - Gets line from file pointer and strip HTML tags

SYNOPSIS
string fgetss (resource $handle, [int $length], [string $allowable_tags]) DESCRIPTION
Identical to fgets(3), except that fgetss(3) attempts to strip any NUL bytes, HTML and PHP tags from the text it reads. PARAMETERS
o $handle -The file pointer must be valid, and must point to a file successfully opened by fopen(3) or fsockopen(3) (and not yet closed by fclose(3)). o $length - Length of the data to be retrieved. o $allowable_tags - You can use the optional third parameter to specify tags which should not be stripped. RETURN VALUES
Returns a string of up to $length - 1 bytes read from the file pointed to by $handle, with all HTML and PHP code stripped. If an error occurs, returns FALSE. Example #1 Reading a PHP file line-by-line <?php $str = <<<EOD <html><body> <p>Welcome! Today is the <?php echo(date('jS')); ?> of <?= date('F'); ?>.</p> </body></html> Text outside of the HTML block. EOD; file_put_contents('sample.php', $str); $handle = @fopen("sample.php", "r"); if ($handle) { while (!feof($handle)) { $buffer = fgetss($handle, 4096); echo $buffer; } fclose($handle); } ?> The above example will output something similar to: Welcome! Today is the of . Text outside of the HTML block. NOTES
Note If PHP is not properly recognizing the line endings when reading files either on or created by a Macintosh computer, enabling the auto_detect_line_endings run-time configuration option may help resolve the problem. SEE ALSO
fgets(3), fopen(3), popen(3), fsockopen(3), strip_tags(3). PHP Documentation Group FGETSS(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:47 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy