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viernes, 17 de julio de 2015

EWTNespanol: "Conozca primero su fe católica - 2015-07-15 - P. Pedro Núñez" y más videos

EWTNespanol: "Conozca primero su fe católica - 2015-07-15 - P. Pedro Núñez" y más videos EWTNespanol: "Conozca primero su fe católica - 2015-07-15 - P. Pedro Núñez" y más videos Heldridge Johann, echa un vistazo a los últimos videos de tus suscripciones a canales del 18/07/2015.    Reproducir todos      Reproducir todos   Conozca primero su fe católica - 2015-07-15 - P. Pedro Núñez hace 9 horas  •  453 reproducciones EWTNespanol   + 1 más   NASA News Conference on the New Horizons Mission hace 6 horas  •  3,654 reproducciones NASA iContact Premier - List Hygiene Webinar hace 8 horas  •  1 reproducción iContact   + 2 más   Cathy Sáenz pagó 6 mil dólares por vestido en boda de Natalie y Yaco hace 2 horas  •  54 reproducciones Latina.pe   + 3 más   ¡HORRIBLES MODAS 8! hace 4 horas  •  8,810 reproducciones Werevertumorro LOS COOL NO MIRAMOS LAS EXPLOSIONES | Minecraft: Nostalgia (3) - Ju... hace 1 hora  •  301 reproducciones JuegaGerman   + 1 más   Casos de Estudio Inversionistas Bolsa NY hace 6 horas  •  261 reproducciones Javier Hernandez Perú: Se promulgó ley de Leasing Inmobiliario/Alquiler-venta para v... hace 1 hora  •  5 reproducciones TVPeruPE Noticias   + 3 más   Testigos de Jehová(1914 la generación que no pasará de ninguna manera) hace 10 horas  •  65 reproducciones Fuerzalavasoriana ARMANDO UN CARDBOARD!! REALIDAD VIRTUAL! │ @brunoacme 301 reproducciones brunoacme ¿Quieres ver más videos? Visita YouTube para descubrir más contenido. Ir a YouTube © 2015 YouTube, LLC 901 Cherry Ave, San Bruno, CA 94066 YouTube envía resúmenes por correo electrónico como estos para que puedas mantenerte al día con las suscripciones al canal. Si ya no quieres recibir estas actualizaciones, puedes editar tus preferencias aquí o anular la suscripción.

Req:Java Swing Developer@ Woonsocket,RI

Hope you are doing Good !!!We have immediate openings for Java Swing Developer  one of our clients. Please let me know ASAP, if any of your consultant’s available in applying for this position. Please find the following Job description.Position:Java Swing DeveloperLocation: Woonsocket,RIDuration: 6 MonthsJob Description:Primary Skills :Java Swing, Good understanding of Java 6/7 , Weblogic, Tomcat, Apache/ web server , Knowledge of webservices is an added advantage    Description:Requirement gathering and elaborationDesign creation, review and participate in design suggestionCoding, Code review, Coding standardOffshore guidance for best practices, standardsOffshore coordination across SDLC stagesIssue resolution, Status tracking and Status reporting to clientStakeholder interaction (Client Project Manager, Tech Leads, Business and QA)Impact Analysis, Estimation SupportQA, UAT, Go-Live and Post Go-Live support -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "reCAPTCHA" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to recaptcha+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com. To post to this group, send email to recaptcha@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at http://bit.ly/1dkFnYd. For more options, visit http://bit.ly/P65DvS.

¡EnAcCiOn está listo! Edición del 17 julio 2015

EnAcCiOn Give your paper the readership it deserves! Find out how EnAcCiOn EnAcCiOn Publicado por Johann Rodríguez Sánchez 17 julio 2015 Mundo Medio ambiente Educación Tecnología Tiempo Libre Negocios #clasificadosún #venezuelaconvdevalores Titular de hoy ¿Volver a la Fotografía Analógica para Seguir Aprendiendo? www­.dzoom­.org­.es - Vivimos en la era digital y ésta nos regala, cada vez, máquinas más complejas capaces de hacer más cosas por ellas mismas. Sin embargo, suele haber un momento en la vida de todo fotógrafo (sobre to... 12 colaboradores - hoy aparecen: Leer el periódico → Correo electrónico gestionado por Si no has solicitado recibir esta notificación o no deseas seguir recibiendo actualizaciones de este periódico, cancela tu suscripción aquí. Nos comprometemos a proteger tu privacidad - más información en nuestra Política de rivacidad. Smallrivers SA, Innovation Park EPFL, Building C, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland

Re: Recaptcha V2 hopefully made simple. Both HTML and PHP code included here

The STRPOS code actually works just fine. I don't check for "success" I check for 'false' but you can check for 'true' as well depending on how you want to proceed in your code. I'm absolutely certain doing the json_decode would work but this is just so much more simple. That's the wonderful thing about coding ... there are many ways to solve the same problem. I just think it's incredibly unfortunate that Google has not provided very clear coding examples that the non-coder can understand or at least follow. So many of us have obviously wasted hours searching for help that could be avoided by Google doing their job better.I usually work alone but I really enjoy opportunities to bounce ideas off others and get a different perspective. Thank you!On Thursday, July 16, 2015 at 5:07:57 PM UTC-7, kh99 wrote: Martin, What you wrote sounds right to me. I also saw your comment at codeforgeek.com. I also tried to leave a comment, but for some reason it wasn't posted (maybe they thought I was a spammer :) .  But I had said basically the same thing you said, so we'll see if the guy responds. By the way, I didn't see Donna's last post before responding. I think the strpos method also works. as long as the 'success' doesn't appear in an error message (and I can't see why it would). But it's easy enough to use json_decode() to get an array, and then you have access to the error messages, so I think that's a better method. I don't know if there is any way to make it an actual object, but it's not necessary. Also, I unfortunately made a typo in my previous post, and I misspelled g-recaptcha-response in the hidden input tag I suggested to use as a test, which would make the script fail. So if anyone actually wants to try that, make sure to add the missing 's' to 'g-recaptcha-reponse'. On Thursday, July 16, 2015 at 2:14:05 PM UTC-4, Martin Brilliant wrote: Thanks, kh99, for pointing out an issue I was staring at for weeks without seeing it. I was looking at that dot and thinking it was an object property pointer. It is in some languages, but not in PHP. The result of $response.'success' is a non-empty string, which will always evaluate to true.A correct PHP object property pointer won't work anyway. According to Google's documentation, $response is a JSON object. A JSON object in PHP is just a string, and in order to do anything sensible with it (other than parsing it as a string) you have to convert it to something else. A commenter on the codeforgeek.com page recommended converting it to an associative array, and that's what I did. I found another site that show how to convert it to a PHP object. But treating the JSON string as an object in PHP, without converting it, won't play.I must confess I don't know PHP. I'm trying to get along by using and adapting other people's code and rummaging around for explanations. I think what I just wrote makes sense.On Wednesday, July 15, 2015 at 1:16:00 AM UTC-4, kh99 wrote: Martin is right, I think. This line is a problem: if($response.'success'==true)   {  echo '

Thanks for posting comment.

';   } A '.' is string concatenation, so you're checking whatever string is in $response, with 'success' tacked on the end. The resulting string is always evaluating to true. If you want to verify this, try temporarily changing your html. Comment out the div like this: and insert this instead:
which will send "anything" as g-recaptcha-response, and you'll see that it succeeds, even though you have not even displayed a recaptcha widget.On Monday, July 13, 2015 at 3:19:16 PM UTC-4, Donna S wrote: I had been using ReCaptcha V1 for a number of years with no real problem. Figuring out how the heck to get V2 running became a nightmare. As much as anyone would like to think it's well documented, IT'S NOT unless you happen to be a master coder. These days I scrape by on coding, so having a very clear, simple and straight forward example would be wonderful. I found a lot of examples of people using Curl and other fun ways to implement this. All of those examples ended up with the stupid recaptcha always being SUCCESS : FALSE and I still don't understand why. Anyway, I do now having it working and hopefully someone can benefit from these short example files I'm attaching. I certainly don't claim to be a great coder, but this actually does work consistently.I happen to use sessions in my forms but code still works the same with or without session enabled.Here's the HTML (again, if you don't want sessions, eliminate the PHP line at the top and call your file cap_test.html). I got this code from codeforgeek so I definitely thank them so much!!CAP_TEST.PHP                 

Google reCAPTHA V2 Demo

   
     

     

      
          
 CAP_PROCESS.PHPPlease check the the captcha form.';              exit;           }// This gets the response and checks it for being true. If it is it prints thanks for posting the comment and exits.       $response = file_get_contents("http://bit.ly/1eXekEZ".$captcha."&remoteip=".$_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR']);if($response.'success'==true)   {  echo '

Thanks for posting comment.

';   }?>So this is fun for testing. In my real form, I don't really care whether they tried to bypass the captcha or if it failed for some reason, I'm still going to make them try again, so this is a small bit of the actual code I use in my PHP processing script:// Set errorflag variable to false so we'll assume this will run with no errors$_SESSION["errorflag"] = "false";// Now go check if the recaptcha was entered correctly// If $_POST['g-recaptcha-response'] is not set, that means the user hit submit without completing the recapcha and we'll send it backif(isset($_POST['g-recaptcha-response'])){ $captcha=$_POST['g-recaptcha-response']; }// So if $captcha was set, lets go see if it was successfull by getting the response and putting the answer into $responseif($captcha){$response=file_get_contents("http://bit.ly/1eXekEZ".$captcha."&remoteip=".$_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR']);}// So now if either the $captcha was not set OR we did not get a success from recaptcha// we'll set the error flag to indicate that recaptcha was bad// and load the sanitized form data into session variables and go on back to the formif ((!$captcha) or ($response."success"==false)) {    $_SESSION["applocation"] = $applocation;    $_SESSION["firstname"] = $firstname; -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "reCAPTCHA" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to recaptcha+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com. To post to this group, send email to recaptcha@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at http://bit.ly/1dkFnYd. For more options, visit http://bit.ly/P65DvS.

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