On Aug 25, 2011, at 5:01, John Black <s...@network-technologies.org> wrote:

> On 24.08.2011 21:38, Mike Mackintosh wrote:
>> On Aug 24, 2011, at 11:52, John Black<s...@network-technologies.org>  wrote:
>>> On 08/24/2011 03:04 AM, Jason Pruim wrote:
>>>> Wondering what everyone does to prevent multiple form submissions?
>>>> My form is simply getting emailed to my email, and it redirects to a 
>>>> success page when submitted...
>>>> Would it be as simple as doing something with the cache control? Basically 
>>>> I'm trying to avoid someone submitting a form... Then hitting back, and 
>>>> submitting again, then hitting back.... I think you get the idea...
>>>> What do you all do?
>>>> Jason Pruim
>>> I am using $_SESSION for this. Set a value on the initial page, a timestamp 
>>> is a good choice, then validate the value on the receiving script and clear 
>>> the value.
>>> I like to use a timestamp because it will allow you to deny a comment which 
>>> took too long to submit.
>> I've always tended to stay away from session for that, as when the browser 
>> closes/restarts, the page is accessible again.
> 
> True, a SESSION can be reset by closing the browser but I am not trying to 
> deny a user from submitting different information again. I want to prevent 
> them from submitting the same data again by accident (back button or refresh).
> 
> A visitor, enters on the form UI page, the session is set, user submits and 
> the form will reset the value in session to null or destroy it.
> 
> If the visitor attempts to resubmit by using refresh then it will fail 
> because session does not contain an expected value anymore. That value is 
> generated on the UI page.
> 
> If the user goes back with the back button then the browser should display 
> the page from cache. The script will not be called and it will not create a 
> new session value.
> If the browser does not use the cache it will have to reload the form. This 
> will create a new session value and an empty form so the user may type a new 
> message. This is like attempting to submit a new message and is something I 
> don't block.
> 
> 
> I do it this way because I don't want to prevent a visitor to submit new 
> information and I don't think that the original question wanted that.
> --
> John
> 
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Ah, ok. For that I submit the page and do a header location to a thank you 
page. This will clear the post data if the back button us clicked.
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