On Feb 3, 2007, at 10:04 PM, Paul Novitski wrote:
On Feb 3, 2007, at 9:09 PM, Albert Padley wrote:
I have an echo statement that I use in conjunction with a MySQL
query.
echo "<tr>\n<td class=\"tabletext\">" . $row['time'] . "</td>\n<td
class=\"tabletext\">" . $row['field'] . "</td>\n<td class=
\"tabletext\">" . $row['division'] . "</td>\n";
This works perfectly fine. However, I will be using the same code
numerous times on the page and wanted to stuff it all into a
variable. At this point I can't remember the proper syntax and
quoting to get this right. Any takers?
At 2/3/2007 08:09 PM, Christopher Weldon wrote:
You could always make it a function...ie:
function drawTableRow($sqlRow) {
return "<tr>\n<td class=\"tabletext\">". $sqlRow['time'] ."</
td> \n<td class=\"tabletext\">".$row['field']."</td>"; //
Simplified for
time purposes.
}
Good suggestion. I like heredoc's clean presentation:
__________________________________
function drawTableRow($sqlrow)
{
return <<<_
<tr>
<td class="tabletext">{$sqlrow['time']}</td>
<td class="tabletext">{$sqlrow['field']}</td>
<td class="tabletext">{$sqlrow['division']}</td>
</tr>
_;
}
__________________________________
By the way, if every cell in every row is class "tabletext" why
have a class at all? You could simply apply the desired styles to
the td element.
Regards,
Paul
I'm using heredoc elsewhere on the page so that's a good idea.
As far as the CSS on the <td>, other cells in the table have
different styling.
Al
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