I could. Just escape the * around "larger" with a backslash \.
Since the paths to the files to be archived are stored in an array anyway there no reason not to use the create_archive
class method to build and save your files all in one go
The second parameter to create_archive
is a compression method. I have set it to zero to request no compression and maximum speed, but you can enable gzip or bzip compression by passing COMPRESS_GZIP
or COMPRESS_BZIP
Although the module's documentation discourages it, you can also set this parameter to 1 through 9 to indicate a level of gzip compression. If you are archiving text files then I highly recommend that you use 1 or 2 here. Passing COMPRESS_GZIP
results in a gzip compression level of 9, which is by far the slowest and can often result in a *larger* file than lower compressions. A value of 1 will often give you a file one third of the size of the uncompressed archive, while 2 may give you another five percent reduction. After that there is usually very little gain
Or, if you want more emphasis, just bold it.
Since the paths to the files to be archived are stored in an array anyway there no reason not to use the create_archive
class method to build and save your files all in one go
The second parameter to create_archive
is a compression method. I have set it to zero to request no compression and maximum speed, but you can enable gzip or bzip compression by passing COMPRESS_GZIP
or COMPRESS_BZIP
Although the module's documentation discourages it, you can also set this parameter to 1 through 9 to indicate a level of gzip compression. If you are archiving text files then I highly recommend that you use 1 or 2 here. Passing COMPRESS_GZIP
results in a gzip compression level of 9, which is by far the slowest and can often result in a larger file than lower compressions. A value of 1 will often give you a file one third of the size of the uncompressed archive, while 2 may give you another five percent reduction. After that there is usually very little gain
You could remove the italics if instead of a *larger* file
you used a* larger *file
:
Since the paths to the files to be archived are stored in an array anyway there no reason not to use the create_archive
class method to build and save your files all in one go
The second parameter to create_archive
is a compression method. I have set it to zero to request no compression and maximum speed, but you can enable gzip or bzip compression by passing COMPRESS_GZIP
or COMPRESS_BZIP
Although the module's documentation discourages it, you can also set this parameter to 1 through 9 to indicate a level of gzip compression. If you are archiving text files then I highly recommend that you use 1 or 2 here. Passing COMPRESS_GZIP
results in a gzip compression level of 9, which is by far the slowest and can often result in a larger file than lower compressions. A value of 1 will often give you a file one third of the size of the uncompressed archive, while 2 may give you another five percent reduction. After that there is usually very little gain
*larger*
in your third part so remove the asterisks and then move them around the entire part, then everything is italic (Pro-tip: Use an IDE for writing text :)