Ok, I tried the "sync" version before, and even when it didn't hang, I 
didn't know where to find the data. I don't really need the virtual file 
system, so the "data" versions seem like the thing for me. I'll wrap it a 
bit to make it synchronous. Some examples in the API documentation would go 
a long way towards understanding it, imho. I'll be sure to report back 
mine, if it works out.

On Thursday, November 13, 2014 11:36:36 AM UTC+1, Sergey Kurdakov wrote:
>
> Hi Alexandar,
>
> >won't emscripten_async_wget serve your needs? 
>
> I mean set of functions
>
> emscripten_async_wget
> emscripten_async_wget2
> emscripten_async_wget_data
> emscripten_async_wget2_data
>
> Regards
> Sergey
>
>
> On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 1:24 PM, Sergey Kurdakov <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> Hi Alexandar.
>>
>> won't emscripten_async_wget serve your needs? it sends requests to 
>> server and params can adjast which type of request is sent.
>>
>> Regards
>> Sergey
>>
>> On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 11:58 AM, Aleksandar Stančić <[email protected] 
>> <javascript:>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi! I'm writing a game in C++/OGL (to be published on the web through 
>>> Emscripten) that needs some interaction with a server, written in 
>>> PHP/MySQL. I already prepared the database and PHP code, and now, the 
>>> surprisingly difficult part is connecting the two. Is there a simple way of 
>>> loading a web page with a few POST strings in C++/Emscripten? Two-to-three 
>>> strings go in (POST) and I need to read one string or integer on the output 
>>> (HTTP response). emscripten_wget just hangs on me, and mixing JS + C++ 
>>> seems to be able to transfer only numbers (ASM). Can someone point me in 
>>> the right direction? I feel like I'm missing something obvious, and I 
>>> wouldn't really know, since I'm not much of a web developer. Thanks.
>>>
>>> Just to clarify, I have a PHP page like this:
>>>
>>> $a = $_POST['a']  // a and b need to come from C++
>>> $b = $_POST['b']
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> // do stuff with $a & $b
>>>
>>>
>>> echo($c)  // a string, under 100 regular ASCII chars, nothing special
>>>
>>> So, I need to do a HTTP POST request (I can switch to GET if that'll 
>>> make things easier), and read a single line of text back into C++.  What 
>>> would be a good way of doing that? I hate to be *that guy**,* but it is 
>>> kind urgent (I really wrote myself into a corner with this one, I expected 
>>> this to be easy), so any tips are greatly appreciated.
>>>
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>>
>>
>

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