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 Posted by Matt on 01/02/08 20:11 
On 29 Dec 2007, 00:30, "Jukka K. Korpela" <jkorp...@cs.tut.fi> wrote: 
> Scripsit Matt: 
> 
> > Am I right in thinking that this code doesn't work in Safari? 
> 
> "This code"? Please learn to post to Usenet. You're supposed to start 
> the message by telling what you are referring to. You're supposed to 
> post a URL if you have a specific page that you have a problem with. 
 
Hi there. Thank you for your fairly rude response. I've been posting 
on Usenet for quite a few years now, I think you simply misunderstood 
me. When I said "this code", I meant a generic reference to the meta 
refresh function in HTML which I assumed readers would be familiar 
with. I wasn't trying to debug a specific line of code; I thought this 
was obvious from my post. It was about a technique. 
 
 
> > I've 
> > just written a PHP script for posting comments which uses a meta 
> > refresh to reload the page so the user can't hit Reload and duplicate 
> > their comment. 
> 
> You're on a wrong track. Please don't try to write some discussion forum 
> software before you have a fairly good idea of how the Web works. 
> Instead, use existing software to set up a forum. Better still, join 
> someone else's forum. There's no shortage of discussion forums that were 
> born dead and remain dead. 
 
Once again, I do not appreciate this tone. As it so happens, I'm using 
an existing forum software (phpBB) to handle the process of posting 
comments. I'm not writing a forum, but my site now has the ability to 
utilise phpBB's forum functionality as an additional module to my own 
self-written code. As far as I'm aware, it's as big of a Usenet faux 
pas to start assuming about other people's problems and telling them 
they're doing it wrong, as it is to ask for answers about code without 
posting it. 
 
> > I added a 'click here to continue' link underneath the 
> > 'you will now be redirected' message, but this isn't ideal - 
> 
> It's a fairly good way to tell that the author of the page has no clue 
> on creating discussion forums. 
> 
 
Oh really? You'd better inform the people from Invision, phpBB, YaBB, 
et al. 
 
 
 
 
@Richard: thank you for the useful response. I guess I'll have to bite 
the bullet and do it that way.
 
  
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