Sunday, April 15, 2007

There are two main things to remember about each of these objects for cyberpublish

cyberpublish
There are two main things to remember about each of these objects. First, each
of these objects has variables that keep track of what is currently going on
inside the object. For example, the coin-intake object would definitely know at
any given time how much money had been inserted into the machine.
Second, each object has a mechanism to allow other objects to communicate
with it. This process is known as messaging, and the parts of the object that
enable this process are known as methods. If you are used to programming in
other languages, methods are much the same as functions or procedures except
that they aren't just floating around in a program, they are attached to specific
objects. cyberpublish
<http://greateventsupport.com>

PHP's "root directory" on the server. Only used if non-empty for cyberpublish

cyberpublish
PHP's "root directory" on the server. Only used if non-empty. If PHP is configured with safe mode,
no files outside this directory are served.
engineboolean
This directive is really only useful in the Apache module version of PHP. It is used by sites that
would like to turn PHP parsing on and off on a per-directory or per-virtual server basis. By putting
php3_engine off in the appropriate places in the httpd.conf file, PHP can be enabled or
disabled.
error_logstring
http://greateventsupport.com/
Name of file where script errors should be logged. If the special value syslog is used, the errors
are sent to the system logger instead. On UNIX, this means syslog(3) and on Windows NT it means
the event log. The system logger is not supported on Windows 95.