From: Greg W. <gr...@gr...> - 2002-11-20 00:00:37
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Ok, I guess the problem is something that would only occur in this very rare case. The problem I had today was that the calendar HASN'T changed, but what PHP iCalendar is parsing from it has, with the addition of VTODO support. Obviously, changes to the parser aren't common enough or huge enough to warrant an immediate-reparsing feature, except perhaps for developers. For some reason, I was thinking that in addition to this problem, you'd run into trouble with changes throughout the course of a day, because I was thinking of 'modification date' as just the date, not the date and the time, which of course it is. Sorry about the misunderstanding, Greg --- gr...@gr... http://www.gregwestin.com/ Contact info: http://www.gregwestin.com/contact.php On Tue, 19 Nov 2002, Jared wrote: > On Tuesday, November 19, 2002, at 12:41 PM, Greg Westin wrote: > > > No, no error in that respect. I meant if people wanted the calendar, > > in > > general, to show the parsed calendar, but at some moment wanted to get > > the > > most current calendar, instead. For example, if I didn't have the > > ability > > to change either my config.inc.php settings or remove the fiels from > > /tmp, > > I wouldn't be able to see my todos in any of my recently-viewed > > calendars > > right now, because they were parsed before I updated my CVS to include > > the > > VTODO support. > > You should be able to see the changes. The script determines whether to > reparse on if the file is different than the last time it parsed. If > you added something to the file, surely the modification date would > change and the script would know to reparse it. As Chad said, if this > is not working for you, let me know and I'll try to figure it out. > Providing a method to force-reparse the file would be possible (and > easy) but I just don't see the benefit. > > If I'm not understanding you, please try to explain again. > > -Jared > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This sf.net email is sponsored by: To learn the basics of securing > your web site with SSL, click here to get a FREE TRIAL of a Thawte > Server Certificate: http://www.gothawte.com/rd524.html > _______________________________________________ > Phpicalendar-devel mailing list > Php...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/phpicalendar-devel > |