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If you are new to PHP or just need to refresh your skills, this is the place to start. This series of tutorials will give you the basic knowledge you will need to create a simple PHP website.
PHP is a reflective programming language originally designed for producing dynamic web pages.[1] PHP is used mainly in server-side scripting, but can be used from a command line interface or in standalone graphical applications. Textual User Interfaces can also be created using ncurses.
These functions allow you to access the mnoGoSearch (former UdmSearch) free search engine. mnoGoSearch is a full-featured search engine software for intranet and internet servers, distributed under the GNU license. mnoGoSearch has a number of unique features, which makes it appropriate for a wide range of applications from search within your site to a specialized search system such as cooking recipes or newspaper search, FTP archive search, news articles search, etc. It offers full-text indexing and searching for HTML, PDF, and text documents. mnoGoSearch consists of two parts. The first is an indexing mechanism (indexer). The purpose of the indexer is to walk through HTTP, FTP, NEWS servers or local files, recursively grabbing all the documents and storing meta-data about that documents in a SQL database in a smart and effective manner. After every document is referenced by its corresponding URL, meta-data is collected by the indexer for later use in a search process. The search is performed via Web interface. C, CGI, PHP and Perl search front ends are included.
More information about mnoGoSearch can be found at http://www.mnogosearch.org/.
Note: This extension has been moved to the PECL repository and is no longer bundled with PHP as of PHP 5.1.0.
Note: This extension is not available on Windows platforms.
Download mnoGosearch from http://www.mnogosearch.org/ and install it on your system. You need at least version 3.1.10 of mnoGoSearch installed to use these functions.
In order to have these functions available, you must compile PHP with
mnoGosearch support by using the
--with-mnogosearchoption. If
you use this option without specifying the path to mnoGosearch, PHP will
look for mnoGosearch under /usr/local/mnogosearch
path by default. If you installed mnoGosearch at a different location
you should specify it: --with-mnogosearch=DIR.
Note: PHP contains built-in MySQL access library, which can be used to access MySQL. It is known that mnoGoSearch is not compatible with this built-in library and can work only with generic MySQL libraries. Thus, if you use mnoGoSearch with MySQL, during PHP configuration you have to indicate the directory of your MySQL installation, that was used during mnoGoSearch configuration, i.e. for example:
--with-mnogosearch --with-mysql=/usr.
This extension has no configuration directives defined in php.ini.
The constants below are defined by this extension, and will only be available when the extension has either been compiled into PHP or dynamically loaded at runtime.
Another Useful functions:
ref.mnogosearch |
PHP is a widely-used general-purpose scripting language that is especially suited for Web development and can be embedded into HTML. If you are new to PHP and want to get some idea of how it works, try the introductory tutorial. After that, check out the online manual, and the example archive sites and some of the other resources available in the links section.