On 2011-07-30 23:33, Stormy wrote:
At 07:06 PM 7/30/2011 +0100, Mark Rousell wrote:On 30/07/2011 18:43, Jeroen Geilman wrote:>>> So, why does a simple file with phpinfo() work and an html page with an>>> include "xyz.php" NOT render the page as desired in the browser???? >>> It just >>> ignores the include. > > HTML does not have an "include" directive. > Please don't confuse PHP with HTML. As an aside and for the avoidance of doubt, whilst they are not strictly part of HTML,SSI are *text* in a format that can be interpreted by an HTML client.
Incorrect. SSI stands for SERVER-Side Includes.The client, if it ever received such content, would not know what to do with it.
Server Side Includes (which include a #include directive) are commonly available to plain HTML on many servers.If php "includes" as output from the server (SSI)
PHP is not SSI.
anything that cannot be parsed as HTML [or as HTML parsable script, js etc] by the client (browser) then it will not be "render[ed ...] as desired in the browser????" which was the question in this thread."Servers" can send anything, invalid text/html from a php script, whatever ... if the client browser cannot parse|interpret the content it is doomed to failure.Best - Paul Tired old sys-admin
I'm sorry to hear that. -- J. --------------------------------------------------------------------- The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project. See <URL:http://httpd.apache.org/userslist.html> for more info. To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx " from the digest: users-digest-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx