Merge pull request #234 from dcbartlett/gh-pages

Typo in _post/ files
This commit is contained in:
Phil Sturgeon
2013-01-08 05:41:12 -08:00
2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

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@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ unless of course you are using persistent connections.
## Abstraction Layers ## Abstraction Layers
Many frameworks provide their own abstraction layer which may or may not sit on top of PDO. These will often emulate features for Many frameworks provide their own abstraction layer which may or may not sit on top of PDO. These will often emulate features for
one database system that another is missing form another by wrapping your queries in PHP methods, giving you actual database abstraction. one database system that another is missing from another by wrapping your queries in PHP methods, giving you actual database abstraction.
This will of course add a little overhead, but if you are building a portable application that needs to work with MySQL, PostgreSQL and This will of course add a little overhead, but if you are building a portable application that needs to work with MySQL, PostgreSQL and
SQLite then a little overhead will be worth it the sake of code cleanliness. SQLite then a little overhead will be worth it the sake of code cleanliness.

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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ It is important that you properly [_hash_][3] passwords before storing them. Pas
**Hashing passwords with `password_hash`** **Hashing passwords with `password_hash`**
In PHP 5.5 `password_hash` will be introduced. At this time it is using BCrypt, the strongest algorithm currently supported by PHP. It will updated in the future to support more algorithms as needed though. The `password_compat` library was created to provide forward compatibility for PHP >= 5.3.7. In PHP 5.5 `password_hash` will be introduced. At this time it is using BCrypt, the strongest algorithm currently supported by PHP. It will be updated in the future to support more algorithms as needed though. The `password_compat` library was created to provide forward compatibility for PHP >= 5.3.7.
Below we hash a string, we then check the hash against a new string. Because our two source strings are different ('secret-password' vs. 'bad-password') this login will fail. Below we hash a string, we then check the hash against a new string. Because our two source strings are different ('secret-password' vs. 'bad-password') this login will fail.