You would still want controller code in place for non-JS clients where
the onclick wouldn't fire.
On Mar 15, 4:35 pm, "francky06l" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> you could even use the aboce and add an "onClik" to redirect where
> you want without submitting at all the form.
>
> On Mar 15, 10:22 pm, Langdon Stevenson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> > Hi Tuzi
>
> > I have cancel buttons in my application that work the way that you want.
> > The html for the button is as follows:
>
> > <input type="submit" value="cancel" name="submit"/>
> > <input type="submit" value="save" name="submit"/>
>
> > Then in my controller I test for the button using:
>
> > if($this->params['form']['submit'] == 'save') {
> > do some stuff ...
> > }
>
> > Regards,
> > Langdon
>
> > Michael Tuzi wrote:
> > > Is it possible to create a cancel button in a form that doesn't
> > > require js using $html->submit? The submit button's value isn't
> > > returned in the params array.
>
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>
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>
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>
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