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Posted by Wog George on 10/10/45 11:45
"Oli Filth" <catch@olifilth.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1145498758.726764.98770@j33g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> davemitc@gmail.com wrote:
>
>> Jonathan N. Little wrote:
>> > davemitc@gmail.com wrote:
>> > > btw- your answer was poor quality, be sure to research the question
>> > > before responding to the network next time. ok?
>> > >
>> >
>> > Actually it was of very good quality because you could have found your
>> > answer there if you view it.
>> >
>> > The given URL
>> >
>> > http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/data-types.html
>> >
>> > explains the different data types where you could have learned that:
>> >
>> > "The four BLOB types are TINYBLOB, BLOB, MEDIUMBLOB, and LONGBLOB.
>> > These differ only in the maximum length of the values they can hold.
>> > The
>> > four TEXT types are TINYTEXT, TEXT, MEDIUMTEXT, and LONGTEXT. These
>> > correspond to the four BLOB types and have the same maximum lengths and
>> > storage requirements. See Section 11.5, "Data Type Storage
>> > Requirements"."
>> >
>> > And if you when to referenced link, Section 11.5
>> >
>> > http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/storage-requirements.html
>> >
>> > You would have discovered *exactly* what you wanted to know:
>> >
>> > <your question 'that you did not properly quote in your response'>
>> >
>> > If I use a MySQL longtext to receive data from a <TEXTAREA> via FORM
>> > POST - how many characters can I transmit before it poofs out?
>> > Similarly, how much for medium and tinytext? Thank you for helping me
>> > understand this.
>> >
>> > </your question>
>> >
>> > The storage limits, i.e., maximum number of characters each data type
>> > can handle.
>> >
>> > You're welcome. And learn to quote when you use Usenet.
>>
>> I guess we have different views. If anybody knows the answer, not
>> "it's in the book" - and has run real-world tests, please share
>> succient knowledge so you can help advance my knowledge (and others who
>> could be interested). Though one day it might be interesting to
>> carefully read the entire ref-manual - I am hoping to get some friendly
>> dialog going about textbox data. If you don't share that specific
>> interest, please stay out of the thread or acting as a quasi-group
>> moderator.
>>
>> PS - others, learn how to use this network. Your messages are
>> beginning to sound like "e-annoyances" - i.e. insults, which can send
>> you to jail these new months you're in. Better get nice. I don't want
>> to see them on my screen.
>
>
> Stop being a dickhead and/or troll. This is a newsgroup, not a
> "network"; the regulars here know "how to use" it. If you can't even
> be arsed to look in the manual for the tool you're using, then what
> sort of response do you expect? You were pointed to the exact location
> to find the information you needed; why are you complaining?
>
> You want to "advance your knowledge"? The best way to do that is to
> learn how to find the information yourself. Newsgroups are here to
> help, but not here to spoon feed you facts which are in the obvious
> place (MySQL -> manual -> data types). Even if you couldn't work that
> out (which is fair enough if you're new to this), then the least you
> could've tried is run a search for "longtext" on the MySQL docs page
> (or even on Google, which would've got you the answer pretty quickly).
> Failing that, reading through sections of the manual is how people find
> stuff out.
>
>
> P.S. The twattish "annoyances" law doesn't apply to me, I'm in the UK.
>
>
As per your suggestion...
Results 1 - 10 of about 116,000 for php longtext. (0.71 seconds)
The description of the first match is "PHP Freaks is an online PHP Help
community that provides PHP Tutorials, PHP Examples, PHP Scripts, PHP
Support, Web Developer Documentation and more."
Perhaps the OP should just learn from this and move on, rather than continue
to provide us with evidence...
--
George
"If we're still alive in the morning then we'll know we're not dead" - Randy
Marsh - 5 April 2006
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