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Posted by Sabine on 09/25/05 13:54
Thanks you very much Silvio, for your answer.
Yes, it seems to be complicated. Especially regarding the time I have to
do the programming for this part of my work.
Now I reduced the time the preparing of the mailtext needs and hope for
the moment that the servers time my script gets will be sufficient for
the task.
I have to check out the circumstances of the productive machine.
But I will surely have a closer look on the AJAX approach later.
Thanks again and have a nice sunday
Sabine
Silvio Porcellana schrieb:
>Sabine wrote:
>
>
>
>>Thanks for your answer, Gustav,
>>
>>now I see I didn't explain good enough what my problem is.
>>My problem is not how to construct a status bar, but not it is
>>possible to provide any output before the headering (*Warning*: Cannot
>>modify header information - headers already sent by). Neither after it.
>>
>>Best regards
>>Sabine
>>
>>P.S.: I played around with PEARs HTML_Progress. It's really worth
>>trying. The user doc on Laurent Lavilles page provides a lot of
>>explanation and examples.
>>(http://pear.laurent-laville.org/HTML_Progress/).
>>
>>
>>
>Hi Sabine
>why don't you try an AJAX approach? (Kinda like GMail and stuff like that?)
>
>You can create a DIV in your page that contains the *output* (maybe an
>image with the width set to the percentage of mails sent): the content
>of this DIV is updated by another script (the one that sends the email)
>that gets called (via JavaScript) at specific intervals with a specific
>query (in your case, the messages to send). This way your main page
>never gets reloaded and you see a nice progress bar in your DIV.
>
>I know it sounds a bit difficult, but it's a cool "technology" and after
>the initial difficulties it can be really useful. As a start, have a
>read here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AJAX
>
>HTH, cheers!
>Silvio
>
>
>
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