can start to logon, request the password to be reset, and an email is
sent to the users email address. If you click on the link you get an
unformatted form. But its a start :-)
password field in order for the update to succeed. If there is no
data entered in the primary password field, the confirmation field is
ignored.
Addresses Trac Ticket #4
File_Structure_Test to make sure we don't regress.
According to the PHP docs, the "public" keyword is implied on static
functions, so remove it. Also, require private static functions to
start with an _.
http://php.net/manual/en/language.oop5.visibility.php
OLD:
$form->submit("Foo") --> <input type="submit" value="Foo">
New:
$form->submit("foo_button")->("Foo") --> <input type="submit" name="foo_button" value="Foo">
Mostly we don't care what the button is so we leave the name blank.
user modules.
* Don't delete vars when we delete a module. This makes
reinstalling a module a lot easier.
* Add user::lookup() as the preferred way to load a user, so that
other modules don't delve into the user module (that'd be a
problem when we swap out user modules)
* Notify site admins if Akismet is not fully configured
* Bundle all server variables into the comment so that if/when we
re-check the comment, we are not using the server info from the
site admin's request.
* Update Akismet to grab request context data from the comment
* Pre-seed comment fields if we have a logged in user. Update
comment::create() API to clarify it for this.
* Delete comment::update(), that's a controller function.
* Add url to User_Model
* Add author_name() author_email() and author_url() to
Comment_Model. It'll return the appropriate values depending
on whether the comment was left by a logged in user or a guest.
* Use resetForm() instead of clearForm() when we reload the
comment form after ajax submit, this way we preserve the
pre-seeded values.
* In the user profile page, ignore blank passwords.
- And refactor printf to our string interpolation / pluralization syntax
- Also, a slight change to the translations_incomings table, using binary(16) instead of char(32) as message key.
1) drop unnecessary semicolon
2) start with <?php for extra security in the case that the server itself doesn't
have short_tags enabled (the app won't work, but we need to make sure that we're
still secure)