I dont agree however, if your creating a system which should be
user friendly I would absolutely demand from my users to have JS
enabled.

If they dont have JS enabled, then -> well, to bad for them...

We have created several web applications and have alot of
customers (B2B), and they have all JS enabled. The friendslyness
and functionality you can do with JS makes the total experience
far better than not using JS. And you alse can save alot of reloading
of the pages with confirmation dialogs and such.

Anyway, its all a matter of opinion.

-- 
-- 
Kim Steinhaug
----------------------------------------------------------------------
There are 10 types of people when it comes to binary numbers:
those who understand them, and those who don't.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
www.steinhaug.com - www.easywebshop.no - www.webkitpro.com
----------------------------------------------------------------------

"Torsten Roehr" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> "Kim Steinhaug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Well,
> >
> > I would include another hidden field and name it something like
"ACTION".
> > I would also include a checkbox on every item you want to do something
> with
> > like this :
> >
> > <input type=checkbox name="item[]" value="<?=$databaseID?>">
> >
> > Then use javascript on your actions to set the action to whatever mode
you
> > need, for example "delete". On the PHP side you get a very nice workflow
> now, as
> > you will recieve an array on all the items which are selected and you
can
> > perform multiple tasks at once. Example, publish n articles in one go,
or
> delete all
> > at once.
>
> I would not recommend using Javascript here because then you are reliant
on
> the client having JS enabled. Just use different names for your submit
> buttons and then check them:
>
> if (isset($_POST['new'])) {
> ...
> } elseif (isset($_POST['delete'])) {
> ...
> }
>
> ...and so on
>
> Regards, Torsten
>
> >
> > Remember to valiudate the $_POST["item"] as an array! Remember, all the
> > values
> > in this array will be the onces you should $_POST["action"].
> >
> > Have fun!
> >
> > --
> > --
> > Kim Steinhaug
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> > There are 10 types of people when it comes to binary numbers:
> > those who understand them, and those who don't.
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> > www.steinhaug.com - www.easywebshop.no - www.webkitpro.com
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > "Aaron Wolski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > Hi all,
> > >
> > > Was wondering if someone had any idea's on this logic and if it'd
work,
> > > before I tried to implement it:
> > >
> > > Within the <form></form> tags I have my buttons - Publish, Unpublish,
> > > New, Edit and Delete.
> > >
> > > Next I have a table of that displays a list of records from a database
> > > with a checkbox to select a particular record.
> > >
> > > Once a record has been "selected" they click one of the top buttons to
> > > perform their desired action.
> > >
> > > WILL this work OR do the buttons HAVE to go at the bottom?
> > >
> > > Thanks! Any help is appreciated.
> > >
> > > Regards,
> > >
> > > Aaron
> > >
> > >

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