I expressed almost my entire knowledge of PHP in the last post...   ;-)

However, if you are doing validation on the client side, you wouldn't use PHP. You would use JScript or JavaScript.

 PHP can't know what you are doing at the client.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Paul InterlockInfo" <[email protected]>
To: "RBASE-L Mailing List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 16, 2010 4:41 PM
Subject: [RBASE-L] - RE: OT +x3 PHP


Thank you Mike-

I was looking for a form like feel and make sure certain fields were filled or it would not send. So I need to check 'field1','field2','field3, etc...
And make sure they have something in there.  Do I just write the code as:

if(trim(field1)=="") or if(trim(field2) or if(trim(field3) or
if(trim(etc...) $validationOK=false;

The problem I have is the 20+ fields and wanting to make sure I have the
code right.




Sincerely,
Paul D.





-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of MikeB
Sent: Tuesday, March 16, 2010 4:20 PM
To: RBASE-L Mailing List
Subject: [RBASE-L] - RE: OT +x3 PHP

Both of the following are the same, that is why it said OR.  I always use
the first in any language just to be clear at the expense of verbosity.

if(call()==TRUE)

if(call())

----- Original Message ----- From: "Paul InterlockInfo" <[email protected]>
To: "RBASE-L Mailing List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 16, 2010 4:12 PM
Subject: [RBASE-L] - RE: OT +x3 PHP


Getting mixed input from the php manual and it is a rather simple (in
RBase)
script so:



if (Trim($EN6365)=="") $validationOK=false;



I would like to include all fields that are entered (no empty fields) so
what is the separator for this?  Is it as simple as the example below and
just use the 'or' even if this example shown had that commented out?





Sincerely,

Paul Dewey





Example:

<?php


if(call()==TRUE) // or if(call())
{
// nothing to do
}
else
{
// do something here
}
?>








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