Quick Search


Tibetan singing bowl music,sound healing, remove negative energy.

528hz solfreggio music -  Attract Wealth and Abundance, Manifest Money and Increase Luck



 
Your forum announcement here!

  Free Advertising Forums | Free Advertising Board | Post Free Ads Forum | Free Advertising Forums Directory | Best Free Advertising Methods | Advertising Forums > Post Your Free Ads Here in English for Advertising .Adult and gambling websites NOT accepted. > Post Your Products & Services Here

Post Your Products & Services Here This section is for posting your free classified ads about new products and services, software, ebooks, and more.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 04-20-2011, 10:19 AM   #1
mornning8303
Major
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 676
mornning8303 is on a distinguished road
Default Windows 7 Professional Validate an E-Mail Address

From Concern #158
June 2007

The net Engineering Job Force (IETF) document, RFC 3696,Windows 7 Professional, “Application
Methods for Checking and Transformation of Names” by John
Klensin,
presents several valid e-mail addresses which might be rejected by several PHP
validation routines. The addresses:
Abc\@def@example.com,Microsoft Office Enterprise 2007,
customer/department=shipping@example.com and
!def,Windows 7 Serial!xyz%abc@example.com
are all valid. One of the much more well-liked normal expressions found inside the
literature rejects all of them:
"^[_a-z0-9-]+(\.[_a-z0-9-]+)*@[a-z0-9-]+(\.[a-z0-9-]+)
↪*(\.[a-z]2,3)$"
This typical expression allows only the underscore (_) and hyphen
(-) characters, numbers and lowercase alphabetic characters. Even
assuming a preprocessing step that converts uppercase alphabetic
characters to lowercase, the expression rejects addresses with
valid characters, such as the slash (/), equal sign (=), exclamation
point (!) and percent (%). The expression also requires that the
highest-level domain component has only two or three characters,Microsoft Office 2007 Key, thus
rejecting legitimate domains, such as .museum.
Another favorite typical expression solution is the following:
"^[a-zA-Z0-9_.-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9-]+.[a-zA-Z0-9-.]+$"
This typical expression rejects all the valid examples from the preceding paragraph.
It does have the grace to allow uppercase alphabetic characters, and
it doesn't make the error of assuming a high-level domain name has only
two or three characters. It allows invalid domain names, such as
illustration..com.
Listing 1 shows an illustration from PHP Dev Shed (www.devshed.com/c/a/PHP/Email-Address-Verification-with-PHP/2).
The code contains (at least) three errors. First, it fails to recognize
many legitimate e-mail address characters, such as percent (%). Second, it
splits the e-mail address into user name and domain parts at the at sign
(@). E-mail addresses that contain a quoted at sign, such as
Abc\@def@example.com will break this code. Third,Windows 7 Download, it fails to check
for host address DNS records. Hosts with a type A DNS entry will accept
e-mail and may not necessarily publish a type MX entry. I'm not
picking on the author at PHP Dev Shed. Far more than 100 reviewers gave
this a four-out-of-five-star rating.
mornning8303 is offline   Reply With Quote

Sponsored Links
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


All times are GMT. The time now is 05:09 PM.

 

Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Free Advertising Forums | Free Advertising Message Boards | Post Free Ads Forum