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Posted by dorayme on 06/18/07 03:01
In article <op.tt2h06ibqnv3q9@metallium>,
Rik <luiheidsgoeroe@hotmail.com> wrote:
> On Sun, 17 Jun 2007 08:22:52 +0200, dorayme
> <doraymeRidThis@optusnet.com.au> wrote:
>
> > For many web sites hosted on Unix servers I use (happily) a
> > construction like this for includes:
> >
> > <?php include ($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'].'/includes/footer.inc');
> > ?>
> >
> > But this does not work on Windows servers and it has always been
> > a puzzle to me (yes, I have asked here and elsewhere before about
> > the matter. I seem not to have appreciated any advice given, or I
> > have forgotten it). Anyone know a reliable way to state the path
> > absolutely on a Windows server so I can use the same construction
> > on each page with assurance the server can find the folder which
> > contains all the includes?
>
>
> It works on Windows for me, with Apache though. On another webserver it
> might be diffent. print_r($_SERVER) to see what data it holds, if that
> doesn't work, I've had good luck with getenv('DOCUMENT_ROOT').
Thanks but I seem not to be getting anywhere (perhaps I am
destined to put in paths tailored to the particular html files
and directories concerned; easy work but a tad inelegant!).
<?php
echo ini_get('include_path');
?>
(as per a suggestion from another ng) got me:
..;e:\php
but I have no clue what to do with it, to be honest.
--
dorayme
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