On Thu, 10 Feb 2005, Richard Lynch wrote: > > In honor of our recent Super Bowl, here is a slow-motion instant replay: > > Bob: "Well, it's a great day so far for PHP today, isn't it Jim?" > Jim: "You've got that right, Bob! Now let's check out this play." > Bob: "Watch as the user surfs right to that web page!" > Jim: "Yeah, smooth!" > Bob: "Then, Apache detects the .php in the URL and hands off the action to > PHP!" > Jim: "PHP has been really strong today, hasn't it?" > Bob: "Sure has, Jim!" > Jim: "Then, PHP builds up some HTML and JavaScript and sends it out!" > Bob: "Yeah, and then PHP says 'Job Done.'" > Jim: "You've got that right, Bob! PHP is outta the game for now, resting." > Bob: "Now watch carefully as the user interacts with the browser." > Jim: "Pay particular attention as they change items in the filelist box." > Bob: "Oooooh! What a fumble!!!" > Jim: "Yeah, it's definitely much too late to be handing off to PHP!" > Bob: "Sure is, Jim. PHP has been out of the game now for awhile!" > > Copyright Richard Lynch and the NFL. > Unauthorized re-broadcast is a violation of Federal Law. Your comments are quite funny but wouldn't it have been alot easier to say that you can't call a PHP function within a generated HTML element? You can however use the onChange event to call another PHP script that will perform the function. Not nearly as many keystrokes :) Ed -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php