The Arcive of Official vBulletin Modifications Site.It is not a VB3 engine, just a parsed copy! |
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#11
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isn't there an easier way to do this without adding another database table? I noticed on the view profile page, instead of having $customfields create everything for you, you can call custom fields individually by adding $userinfo[field#] in the template. Couldn't something similar be done on the edit profile and registration pages?
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#12
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First of all, we added a field, not a table.
And like I said before, there's no difference between adding it from the control panel and adding it using a query. Both will create a new field, only in the control panel it will create it in a different table (userfield). |
#13
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I went searching last night...
have you seen this? I think it does the same thing we're trying to do here, if I'm not mistaken |
#14
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by FireFly
I think I know what you mean. I'll find the thread in a sec. http://www.vbulletin.com/forum/showt...threadid=21833 But I remember that it uses flat files, which kinda sucks (IMO). This is exactly how it's done with the other drop-down fields in vBulletin. I dunno, but for me it looks like the easiest, cleanest way to do this. I know it requires a bit hacking, but not TOO much of it. Maybe a hack can be written to do this automatically... |
#15
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"D'OH!!!" -Homer
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