E exice New member Mar 22, 2011 #1 Hi All, This problem, should put backslashes' s (\) look is blocking. Look: PHP: python Makespec.py\bug.py No PHP Code: python Makespec.py\bug.py
Hi All, This problem, should put backslashes' s (\) look is blocking. Look: PHP: python Makespec.py\bug.py No PHP Code: python Makespec.py\bug.py
Paul B XenForo moderator Staff member Mar 22, 2011 #4 Which version of software are you running? It works for me in 1.0.0.
Luke F Well-known member Mar 22, 2011 #5 I can reproduce this on my localhost server running PHP 5.2.9-2 (long overdue for an update), but not my live server running PHP 5.3.6. Both are running XenForo 1.0.0. Neither has magic quotes enabled.
I can reproduce this on my localhost server running PHP 5.2.9-2 (long overdue for an update), but not my live server running PHP 5.3.6. Both are running XenForo 1.0.0. Neither has magic quotes enabled.
E exice New member Mar 22, 2011 #6 I'm testing xenforo stable 1.0.0 and RC3 but, Slash does not seem look: This Site Versiyon: Xenforo Stable 1.0.0 http://www.xen-tr.com/threads/deneme-text.164/#post-2172
I'm testing xenforo stable 1.0.0 and RC3 but, Slash does not seem look: This Site Versiyon: Xenforo Stable 1.0.0 http://www.xen-tr.com/threads/deneme-text.164/#post-2172
Paul B XenForo moderator Staff member Mar 22, 2011 #7 Don't worry, it has been logged as a bug and moved back to the bugs forum. It will be addressed in due course.
Don't worry, it has been logged as a bug and moved back to the bugs forum. It will be addressed in due course.
Scott Active member Mar 24, 2011 #8 This comes from PHP's highlight_string() anything that goes in has to be valid PHP else the tokenizer and syntax highlighter gets all confused I suspect it's different between PHP 5.2 and 5.3.
This comes from PHP's highlight_string() anything that goes in has to be valid PHP else the tokenizer and syntax highlighter gets all confused I suspect it's different between PHP 5.2 and 5.3.
Mike XenForo developer Staff member Mar 24, 2011 #9 What Scott said. It's internal to PHP, so there's nothing we can do. (It would likely be ok in 5.3, due to namespaces.) It's really what happens if you pass non-PHP into the area that expects PHP.
What Scott said. It's internal to PHP, so there's nothing we can do. (It would likely be ok in 5.3, due to namespaces.) It's really what happens if you pass non-PHP into the area that expects PHP.