php-general Digest 5 Mar 2013 11:02:35 -0000 Issue 8149
Topics (messages 320383 through 320405):
Re: Open form in new window
320383 by: John Taylor-Johnston
320384 by: Tim Streater
320387 by: John Taylor-Johnston
320389 by: Matijn Woudt
320394 by: Paul M Foster
320395 by: Paul M Foster
320396 by: Ashley Sheridan
320397 by: Tim Streater
320398 by: Jim Giner
320404 by: tamouse mailing lists
Not counting my own page visits
320385 by: Angela Barone
320386 by: Tommy Pham
320388 by: Ashley Sheridan
320390 by: Angela Barone
320391 by: Angela Barone
320392 by: Ashley Sheridan
320399 by: Angela Barone
320400 by: David Robley
320401 by: Ashley Sheridan
320403 by: tamouse mailing lists
PHP Web Developer Opportunity
320393 by: Allison Garcia
Re: [ad] [free+opensource] htmlMicroscope (nested array viewer/dumper) upgraded
- now allows for even larger arrays
320402 by: Ravi Gehlot
SPAM
320405 by: SPAM
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
--- Begin Message ---
> You could echo HTML code e.g.
Which is still purely HTML and has nothing whatsoever to do with PHP.
>
> <form action="result.php" method="post">
> Number: <input id="quantity" type="text" />
> <button type="button" onclick="OpenWindow()">Submit</button>
> </form>
>
> or include it as one of your form attributes:
>
> <form action="demo_form.asp" method="get" target="_blank">
> First name: <input type="text" name="fname"><br>
> Last name: <input type="text" name="lname"><br>
> <input type="submit" value="Submit">
> </form>
Again, pure HTML, and no PHP involved. Specifically, the (asp??) page
called in the form action handler will never even be aware of the fact
that the page was opened in a new window, or at least was supposed to.
I was using an example and NOT intended to show ASP.
target="_blank" will open a new window every time. That will defeat the
purpose.
I have many different submit buttons, for different purposes. Depending
on the $_POST value of each submit button, I tell PHP to do different
things,
<input value="Update" type="submit"> <input name="DPRmode" value="Enter
Data" type="submit">
I want to open a different window when I press: <input name="DPRmode"
value="Enter Data" type="submit">
I guess the best I can hope for is to try
<input name="DPRmode" value="Enter Data" type="submit"
onclick="OpenWindow()">
<button type="button" onclick="OpenWindow()">Submit</button> will not
submit the form contents.
Thanks,
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On 04 Mar 2013 at 17:10, John Taylor-Johnston
<john.taylor-johns...@cegepsherbrooke.qc.ca> wrote:
> <button type="button" onclick="OpenWindow()">Submit</button> will not
> submit the form contents.
Nothing to stop your OpenWindow() function doing a submit as in:
<button type="button" onclick="OpenWindow(this.form)">Submit</button>
function OpenWindow (formPtr)
{
// Some actions
formPtr.submit ();
}
Personally I never submit forms. I use ajax to communicate with PHP scripts and
do something with the data that is returned by the script. You can see a simple
example at http://www.clothears.org.uk
--
Cheers -- Tim
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
If you want to open a new page in response to a submit button press
(using PHP) you may be out of luck. I don't know of a way to do it
without involving another language. Opening a different page in the
*same* window, yes. Otherwise, no. But watch the other replies. Maybe
someone knows something I don't. Paul
Nope. Out of luck.
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 6:10 PM, John Taylor-Johnston <
john.taylor-johns...@cegepsherbrooke.qc.ca> wrote:
> > You could echo HTML code e.g.
>>
>> Which is still purely HTML and has nothing whatsoever to do with PHP.
>>
>> >
>> > <form action="result.php" method="post">
>> > Number: <input id="quantity" type="text" />
>> > <button type="button" onclick="OpenWindow()">Submit<**/button>
>> > </form>
>> >
>> > or include it as one of your form attributes:
>> >
>> > <form action="demo_form.asp" method="get" target="_blank">
>> > First name: <input type="text" name="fname"><br>
>> > Last name: <input type="text" name="lname"><br>
>> > <input type="submit" value="Submit">
>> > </form>
>> Again, pure HTML, and no PHP involved. Specifically, the (asp??) page
>> called in the form action handler will never even be aware of the fact
>> that the page was opened in a new window, or at least was supposed to.
>>
>>
>> I was using an example and NOT intended to show ASP.
>>
> target="_blank" will open a new window every time. That will defeat the
> purpose.
>
> I have many different submit buttons, for different purposes. Depending on
> the $_POST value of each submit button, I tell PHP to do different things,
>
>
I don't wanna interrupt this thread, but are you sure you want multiple
submit buttons, especially more than two?
There are probably better solutions for what you want, for example, radio
button to select which action to take?
- Matijn
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 05:39:00PM +0000, Tim Streater wrote:
> On 04 Mar 2013 at 17:10, John Taylor-Johnston
> <john.taylor-johns...@cegepsherbrooke.qc.ca> wrote:
>
> > <button type="button" onclick="OpenWindow()">Submit</button> will not
> > submit the form contents.
>
> Nothing to stop your OpenWindow() function doing a submit as in:
>
> <button type="button" onclick="OpenWindow(this.form)">Submit</button>
>
>
> function OpenWindow (formPtr)
> {
>
> // Some actions
>
> formPtr.submit ();
>
> }
>
>
> Personally I never submit forms. I use ajax to communicate with PHP
> scripts and do something with the data that is returned by the script.
> You can see a simple example at http://www.clothears.org.uk
--
> Cheers -- Tim
>
I'm trying to figure out where the net gain in that is. The PHP file
being called via AJAX is doing its processing on the server either way.
So it appears the only difference is an asynchronous Javascript/AJAX
call or a synchronous PHP call (on a standard PHP form submission). What
am I missing?
Paul
--
Paul M. Foster
http://noferblatz.com
http://quillandmouse.com
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 06:58:41PM +0100, Matijn Woudt wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 6:10 PM, John Taylor-Johnston <
> john.taylor-johns...@cegepsherbrooke.qc.ca> wrote:
>
> > > You could echo HTML code e.g.
> >>
> >> Which is still purely HTML and has nothing whatsoever to do with PHP.
> >>
> >> >
> >> > <form action="result.php" method="post">
> >> > Number: <input id="quantity" type="text" />
> >> > <button type="button" onclick="OpenWindow()">Submit<**/button>
> >> > </form>
> >> >
> >> > or include it as one of your form attributes:
> >> >
> >> > <form action="demo_form.asp" method="get" target="_blank">
> >> > First name: <input type="text" name="fname"><br>
> >> > Last name: <input type="text" name="lname"><br>
> >> > <input type="submit" value="Submit">
> >> > </form>
> >> Again, pure HTML, and no PHP involved. Specifically, the (asp??) page
> >> called in the form action handler will never even be aware of the fact
> >> that the page was opened in a new window, or at least was supposed to.
> >>
> >>
> >> I was using an example and NOT intended to show ASP.
> >>
> > target="_blank" will open a new window every time. That will defeat the
> > purpose.
> >
> > I have many different submit buttons, for different purposes. Depending on
> > the $_POST value of each submit button, I tell PHP to do different things,
> >
> >
> I don't wanna interrupt this thread, but are you sure you want multiple
> submit buttons, especially more than two?
> There are probably better solutions for what you want, for example, radio
> button to select which action to take?
>
> - Matijn
I have to agree with Matijn for this reason: If the user hits the
[Enter] button at the end of their form data entry, it will trigger the
*first* submit button on the page, which may or may not be what you
want. Perhaps better to have the user indicate the action they wish via
radio button (as Matijn suggested) and then a single submit button.
Paul
--
Paul M. Foster
http://noferblatz.com
http://quillandmouse.com
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mon, 2013-03-04 at 15:22 -0500, Paul M Foster wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 06:58:41PM +0100, Matijn Woudt wrote:
>
> > On Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 6:10 PM, John Taylor-Johnston <
> > john.taylor-johns...@cegepsherbrooke.qc.ca> wrote:
> >
> > > > You could echo HTML code e.g.
> > >>
> > >> Which is still purely HTML and has nothing whatsoever to do with PHP.
> > >>
> > >> >
> > >> > <form action="result.php" method="post">
> > >> > Number: <input id="quantity" type="text" />
> > >> > <button type="button" onclick="OpenWindow()">Submit<**/button>
> > >> > </form>
> > >> >
> > >> > or include it as one of your form attributes:
> > >> >
> > >> > <form action="demo_form.asp" method="get" target="_blank">
> > >> > First name: <input type="text" name="fname"><br>
> > >> > Last name: <input type="text" name="lname"><br>
> > >> > <input type="submit" value="Submit">
> > >> > </form>
> > >> Again, pure HTML, and no PHP involved. Specifically, the (asp??) page
> > >> called in the form action handler will never even be aware of the
> > >> fact
> > >> that the page was opened in a new window, or at least was supposed
> > >> to.
> > >>
> > >>
> > >> I was using an example and NOT intended to show ASP.
> > >>
> > > target="_blank" will open a new window every time. That will defeat the
> > > purpose.
> > >
> > > I have many different submit buttons, for different purposes. Depending on
> > > the $_POST value of each submit button, I tell PHP to do different things,
> > >
> > >
> > I don't wanna interrupt this thread, but are you sure you want multiple
> > submit buttons, especially more than two?
> > There are probably better solutions for what you want, for example, radio
> > button to select which action to take?
> >
> > - Matijn
>
> I have to agree with Matijn for this reason: If the user hits the
> [Enter] button at the end of their form data entry, it will trigger the
> *first* submit button on the page, which may or may not be what you
> want. Perhaps better to have the user indicate the action they wish via
> radio button (as Matijn suggested) and then a single submit button.
>
> Paul
>
> --
> Paul M. Foster
> http://noferblatz.com
> http://quillandmouse.com
>
I don't know if that would hold true for forms that contain multiple
submit buttons.
There are plenty of good reasons though for multiple submit buttons in a
form, such as a shopping cart where each button is tied to a product and
allows it to be removed.
Thanks,
Ash
http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On 04 Mar 2013 at 20:17, Paul M Foster <pa...@quillandmouse.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 05:39:00PM +0000, Tim Streater wrote:
>> Personally I never submit forms. I use ajax to communicate with PHP
>> scripts and do something with the data that is returned by the script.
>> You can see a simple example at http://www.clothears.org.uk
> I'm trying to figure out where the net gain in that is. The PHP file
> being called via AJAX is doing its processing on the server either way.
> So it appears the only difference is an asynchronous Javascript/AJAX
> call or a synchronous PHP call (on a standard PHP form submission). What
> am I missing?
ISTM it's better for the user if, rather than reloading a whole page, you can
get some bits of data from the server and use them to just alter the parts of
the page that need updating.
--
Cheers -- Tim
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On 3/4/2013 12:44 AM, John Taylor-Johnston wrote:
I have many different submit button.
<input value="Update" type="submit">
<input name="DPRmode" value="Enter Data" type="submit">
When php processes value="Enter Data", I would like to open a new
window, but only if I click this one.
Possible? I knw ther is an HTML target="" thingy. Can PHP do anything
magic?
Just put the DPRmode button in a separate form where that form's target
attribute specifies another window name. Check your html reference for
reserved names you can use or just make one up. If you need some of the
input values that duplicated in this "new" form, use an onclick js
function to populate some hidden html fields contained within the form
from the original inputs outside the form. A bit of work, but very easy
to do. OR - you could use that same js function to alter the target
parm of the single form that you have.
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
I would like to just take a step back and ponder what the user
experience of this will be. Click a submit button, one of *many* as
the OP says, and a new browser window opens? I don't think that is how
most people experience the web these days. Technicalities of how one
does this notwithstanding, I am urging the OP to consider their users.
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
Hello,
I have a script that counts hits to all the pages in my site and emails
me a report nightly. However, it also counts my visits to my site, and when
I'm coding, I'm hitting a lot of my pages, repeatedly. I'd like to find a way
to not count my page visits.
At first, I thought about adding a parameter to each URL and parsing
that in the script, but that would get old real fast, and also, I may forget to
add it each time. Is there a way to tell the script to ignore my visits?
Thank you,
Angela
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 9:47 AM, Angela Barone
<ang...@italian-getaways.com> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have a script that counts hits to all the pages in my site and
> emails me a report nightly. However, it also counts my visits to my site,
> and when I'm coding, I'm hitting a lot of my pages, repeatedly. I'd like to
> find a way to not count my page visits.
>
> At first, I thought about adding a parameter to each URL and parsing
> that in the script, but that would get old real fast, and also, I may forget
> to add it each time. Is there a way to tell the script to ignore my visits?
>
> Thank you,
> Angela
What about ignoring $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'] or $_SERVER['REMOTE_HOST']
where that matches your public IP or FQDN?
http://php.net/manual/en/reserved.variables.server.php
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
Angela Barone <ang...@italian-getaways.com> wrote:
>Hello,
>
> I have a script that counts hits to all the pages in my site and
>emails me a report nightly. However, it also counts my visits to my
>site, and when I'm coding, I'm hitting a lot of my pages, repeatedly.
>I'd like to find a way to not count my page visits.
>
> At first, I thought about adding a parameter to each URL and parsing
>that in the script, but that would get old real fast, and also, I may
>forget to add it each time. Is there a way to tell the script to
>ignore my visits?
>
>Thank you,
>Angela
>--
>PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
>To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
You could do it by checking for your ip address if you have a fixed one, or set
a cookie with a long life and check for that, discounting visits when either
are true
Thanks,
Ash
http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mar 4, 2013, at 9:52 AM, Tommy Pham wrote:
> What about ignoring $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'] or $_SERVER['REMOTE_HOST']
> where that matches your public IP or FQDN?
Hi Tommy,
I am checking for $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'] but how would I check that
against mine? I don't have a static IP.
Thanks,
Angela
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mar 4, 2013, at 9:56 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> set a cookie with a long life and check for that, discounting visits when
> either are true
Hi Ash,
I don't know anything about cookies. It sounds complicated to me. Is
there a simple way to set one?
Thanks,
Angela
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mon, 2013-03-04 at 10:15 -0800, Angela Barone wrote:
> On Mar 4, 2013, at 9:56 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> > set a cookie with a long life and check for that, discounting visits when
> > either are true
>
> Hi Ash,
>
> I don't know anything about cookies. It sounds complicated to me. Is
> there a simple way to set one?
>
> Thanks,
> Angela
You can manually write a cookie on your machine, or use a special script
that only you visit that contains a setcookie() call (it only need be
set once). From there on, you can check the $_COOKIES super global for
the presence of your cookie. To test, visit the site with a different
browser (browsers won't share the cookies) and you'll see the visit
logged.
Thanks,
Ash
http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mar 4, 2013, at 11:33 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> You can manually write a cookie on your machine, or use a special script that
> only you visit that contains a setcookie() call (it only need be set once).
> From there on, you can check the $_COOKIES super global for the presence of
> your cookie.
I don't know why, but I can't get cookies to work. Here's a script I'm
calling from my browser:
<?php
$domain = ($_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] != 'localhost') ? $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] :
false;
$cookie = setcookie('test2', '123' , time()+60*60*24*30, '/', $domain);
?>
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8" />
<title>Test Page</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php echo 'Cookie is: '.$_COOKIE[$cookie]."<br>"; ?>
<?php echo 'Domain is: '.$domain."<br>"; ?>
</body>
</html>
The domain is being displayed but the cookie is not. There's no cookie
in the browser prefs, either. What am I doing wrong?
Angela
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
Angela Barone wrote:
> On Mar 4, 2013, at 11:33 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>> You can manually write a cookie on your machine, or use a special script
>> that only you visit that contains a setcookie() call (it only need be set
>> once). From there on, you can check the $_COOKIES super global for the
>> presence of your cookie.
>
> I don't know why, but I can't get cookies to work. Here's a script I'm
> calling from my browser:
>
> <?php
> $domain = ($_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] != 'localhost') ?
> $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] : false;
> $cookie = setcookie('test2', '123' , time()+60*60*24*30, '/', $domain);
> ?>
>
> <!DOCTYPE html>
> <html lang="en">
> <head>
> <meta charset="utf-8" />
> <title>Test Page</title>
> </head>
> <body>
> <?php echo 'Cookie is: '.$_COOKIE[$cookie]."<br>"; ?>
> <?php echo 'Domain is: '.$domain."<br>"; ?>
> </body>
> </html>
>
> The domain is being displayed but the cookie is not. There's no cookie in
> the browser prefs, either. What am I doing wrong?
>
> Angela
Misunderstanding what $cookie contains? It is a boolean, i.e. it will be
true or false depending on whether the cookie was set or not. To echo the
contents of a cookie, you need to use the cookie name, viz
<?php echo 'Cookie is: '.$_COOKIE['test2']."<br>"; ?>
--
Cheers
David Robley
Oxymoron: Sisterly Love.
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Tue, 2013-03-05 at 10:19 +1030, David Robley wrote:
> Angela Barone wrote:
>
> > On Mar 4, 2013, at 11:33 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> >> You can manually write a cookie on your machine, or use a special script
> >> that only you visit that contains a setcookie() call (it only need be set
> >> once). From there on, you can check the $_COOKIES super global for the
> >> presence of your cookie.
> >
> > I don't know why, but I can't get cookies to work. Here's a script I'm
> > calling from my browser:
> >
> > <?php
> > $domain = ($_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] != 'localhost') ?
> > $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] : false;
> > $cookie = setcookie('test2', '123' , time()+60*60*24*30, '/', $domain);
> > ?>
> >
> > <!DOCTYPE html>
> > <html lang="en">
> > <head>
> > <meta charset="utf-8" />
> > <title>Test Page</title>
> > </head>
> > <body>
> > <?php echo 'Cookie is: '.$_COOKIE[$cookie]."<br>"; ?>
> > <?php echo 'Domain is: '.$domain."<br>"; ?>
> > </body>
> > </html>
> >
> > The domain is being displayed but the cookie is not. There's no cookie in
> > the browser prefs, either. What am I doing wrong?
> >
> > Angela
>
> Misunderstanding what $cookie contains? It is a boolean, i.e. it will be
> true or false depending on whether the cookie was set or not. To echo the
> contents of a cookie, you need to use the cookie name, viz
>
> <?php echo 'Cookie is: '.$_COOKIE['test2']."<br>"; ?>
>
> --
> Cheers
> David Robley
>
> Oxymoron: Sisterly Love.
>
>
Not just that, but if you set a cookie, you won't be able to retrieve it
in the same script I believe. It's only available in the $_COOKIES array
once you refresh the page, as that's when the super global is populated
from the cookie data that the browser sends.
Thanks,
Ash
http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
On Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 5:58 PM, Ashley Sheridan
<a...@ashleysheridan.co.uk> wrote:
> On Tue, 2013-03-05 at 10:19 +1030, David Robley wrote:
>
>> Angela Barone wrote:
>>
>> > On Mar 4, 2013, at 11:33 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>> >> You can manually write a cookie on your machine, or use a special script
>> >> that only you visit that contains a setcookie() call (it only need be set
>> >> once). From there on, you can check the $_COOKIES super global for the
>> >> presence of your cookie.
>> >
>> > I don't know why, but I can't get cookies to work. Here's a script I'm
>> > calling from my browser:
>> >
>> > <?php
>> > $domain = ($_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] != 'localhost') ?
>> > $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] : false;
>> > $cookie = setcookie('test2', '123' , time()+60*60*24*30, '/', $domain);
>> > ?>
>> >
>> > <!DOCTYPE html>
>> > <html lang="en">
>> > <head>
>> > <meta charset="utf-8" />
>> > <title>Test Page</title>
>> > </head>
>> > <body>
>> > <?php echo 'Cookie is: '.$_COOKIE[$cookie]."<br>"; ?>
>> > <?php echo 'Domain is: '.$domain."<br>"; ?>
>> > </body>
>> > </html>
>> >
>> > The domain is being displayed but the cookie is not. There's no cookie in
>> > the browser prefs, either. What am I doing wrong?
>> >
>> > Angela
>>
>> Misunderstanding what $cookie contains? It is a boolean, i.e. it will be
>> true or false depending on whether the cookie was set or not. To echo the
>> contents of a cookie, you need to use the cookie name, viz
>>
>> <?php echo 'Cookie is: '.$_COOKIE['test2']."<br>"; ?>
>>
>> --
>> Cheers
>> David Robley
>>
>> Oxymoron: Sisterly Love.
>>
>>
>
>
> Not just that, but if you set a cookie, you won't be able to retrieve it
> in the same script I believe. It's only available in the $_COOKIES array
> once you refresh the page, as that's when the super global is populated
> from the cookie data that the browser sends.
>
> Thanks,
> Ash
> http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk
>
>
Same script *invocation*. The cookie gets set when the response is
sent back to the client. If the client calls the same script again,
that cookie then uploaded. :)
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
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--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
I like PHPUnit for that matter. It does a good job of debugging.
Ravi.
On Sat, Dec 22, 2012 at 8:41 AM, rene7705 <rene7...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Folks.
>
> URL: http://fancywebapps.com/products/htmlMicroscope
>
> Just wanted to let you all know that I've completed a long overdue
> upgrade to my free htmlMicroscope web component.
> It is basically a fancy replacement for var_dump() which can show you
> the full depth of an array regardless of how large or deep your PHP
> array or javascript object is.
>
> I won't repeat the entire homepage content here, but I think this
> version could be useful for at least some of the programmers on this
> list.
>
> I'll only repeat this message for significant updates.
>
> This is a significant update because I've finally cracked the barrier
> of displaying an object with more than a few hundred key-value pairs
> on a single level. That used to crash all browsers, not anymore.
>
> i'll continue work on this, want to build in (in order of priority):
> - auto navigation options (auto smooth scroll to links within the data)
> - middle mouse button click -> smooth offset scrolling
> - html source view
> - auto indented and colorcoded syntax-checked view for html + json
>
> Merry Christmas and a productive New Year to ya'll :D
>
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>
>
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