If I'm understanding the question right, yes you can.

if($AlertUser2success != 0)
{
   ?>
   <div class="pg_DIVmainText">
       <img class="divBGgradient" style="" src="images/BehindBox01.png" alt="" 
/>
       <div>
           <?php include(); ?>
       </div>
   </div>
   <?php
}

Regards,

-Josh
____________________________________
Joshua Kehn | josh.k...@gmail.com
http://joshuakehn.com

On Oct 11, 2010, at 7:05 PM, Govinda wrote:

> Hi everyone,
> 
> ------------------------------------- newbie preface 
> -------------------------------------
> I finally got some time to come back to learning a little more PHP... and I 
> am looking forward to lots more in coming months, with any luck.  Anyway, as 
> I was working towards the last deadline with the PHP project I was working 
> on, I uncovered several issues I did not know the answer to.. and I just 
> hacked around them  to avoid taking more time while I was under the 
> clock/meter.  Now on my own time, I want to ask, so I learn more deeply what 
> was more ideal understanding/technique.
> ------------------------------------- /newbie preface 
> -------------------------------------
> 
> Here's one of those Q's:
> 
> I was working on a system ("MoveableType", A.K.A. "MT") that writes db data 
> to static text files (web pages) whenever the CMS admin tells it to 
> "publish".  That system writes out the PHP code that I tell it to, in each 
> page of the site.  There was one place in my PHP code (marked with ***MT***, 
> below) where I needed to include a chunk of data that would not be known (or 
> written out) until the admin next published the page (i.e. I could not 
> include the code inline).   I needed to display it only in case of a PHP 
> comparison evaluating to true.  I was tempted to break out of PHP at that 
> point, and then go back into PHP within that ***MT*** block itself, _only_ 
> when/where in the few places that block needs PHP.. in order to reduce the 
> head pressure (of the less-technical admin using the MT CMS) having to wade 
> through so many PHP print/echo statements  (I could not get heredoc to work 
> right, but that is another topic/post ;-).  But despite the temptation, I did 
> not attempt that because I thought it might break the logic of the if { } .  
> On the other hand, I vaguely remember reading something that made me think 
> something like that is possible.. but I don't know where I saw it.
> 
> To better summarize my Q:
> 
> could the below "<mt:Var name="PageMoreNoCRLF">" (which contains a long block 
> of HTML sprinkled with a little PHP whose contents are  known only at 
> runtime) be *broken out of* of the <?php ... ?> wrapper that surrounds the if 
> { } statement, and have it still only get displayed on the final webpage when 
> the if { } statement evaluates to true?  The reason I want that is so that I 
> can just keep the HTML straight and simple in that MT block, instead of using 
> PHP string-printing statements to spit out it's mostly-pure-HTML contents.  
> The admin using the system is using a WYSIWYG HTML editable textarea 
> interface, kind of like FCKEditor.
> 
> if($AlertUser2success != 0) {
>       echo '<div class="pg_DIVmainText">'."\n";
>                       echo '<img class="divBGgradient" style="" 
> src="images/BehindBox01.png" alt="" />'."\n";
>                       echo '<div>'."\n";
>                                       /*---  here is the ***MT*** 
> block/include ---> ---*/ <mt:Var name="PageMoreNoCRLF">
>                       echo '</div>'."\n";
>       echo '</div>'."\n";
> } else {
> ...
> 
> ------------
> Govinda
> govinda(DOT)webdnatalk(AT)gmail(DOT)com
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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