On Wed, January 25, 2006 6:11 pm, Fernando Anchorena wrote: > I'm stuck trying to get work this : > > This is an example > page1.php > ======================================= > <form action="/page2.php?form=yes" method="post"> > $sql_pro ="SELECT Sid FROM table"; > $res_pro = @mysql_query( $sql_pro); > while ($campo_pro = @mysql_fetch_array($res_pro)) { > $sid_pro = $campo_pro["Sid"]; // *sid_pro = 4* > $sid_pro = 'p'.$sid_pro; // I'm trying to use de value of > $sid_pro as a VAR name *$sid_pro = p4* > print "<td > *<input name='$sid_pro' type= 'radio' > value='SOLVE_ME'/>* </td>"; // *name=p4 * > BLA BLA BLA > } > SUBMIT FORM > ======================================= > > page2.php > ======================================= > $sqlname = "SELECT Sid FROM Table"; > $res = mysql_query ($sqlname) ; > while ($campo_pro = mysql_fetch_array($res)) { > $name1 = $campo_pro["Sid"]; // *$name1 = 4* > $radio = '$'.'p'.$name1 ; // *$radio = $p4 > ---------------------- > Now the Problem > **How can I get the Value SOLVE_ME from the submited form ?* > > } > ====================================== While Variable Variables solve the original question, as asked, I suspect you'd be better off using: ... NAME="camp_pro[<?php echo $sid_pro?>]" ... in your radio buttons. HTML and browsers will treat the radio buttons as "the same" if the camp_pro part matches, and you'll have $sid_pro I confess the formatting left me a bit confused as to which variable you want where, but I suspect resorting to Variable Variables is not needed at all. -- Like Music? http://l-i-e.com/artists.htm -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php