Stut wrote:
On 8 Jul 2008, at 21:09, Philip Thompson wrote:
On Jul 8, 2008, at 2:42 PM, Thiago H. Pojda wrote:
On Tue, Jul 8, 2008 at 4:11 PM, Philip Thompson
<philthathril@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Jul 8, 2008, at 12:32 PM, tedd wrote:
At 4:18 PM +0100 7/8/08, Mayer, Jonathan wrote:
In the end I decided the simplest way of coding the functionality was
to do
something similar to what Eric said, and have some extra submit
buttons in
the form, called Next, Previous and Jump. When clicked, they each
submitted
the form again with a different flag set. Along with a session variable
storing the "current" page, I was able to code a reasonably neat
solution
deciding which results to show without having to rewrite any sections
of my
code. Because these submit buttons are tied to a form at the top of the
page, this has limited me to only having the navigational buttons at
the top
of the results table rather than at the bottom too, but that is
perfectly
fine in my situation.
Jon:
Actually, you don't need to use sessions, post, nor get to pass
variables between scripts.
Here's an example:
http://www.webbytedd.com/bb/tedd/index.php
Of course, the smart ones on this list will figure it out pretty
quickly.
I guess I'm not smart. =( If it's fairly obvious, then I'm not seeing
it...
~Phil
Me neither. I'm guessing: either it's using a file to transfer vars
(cookie or server-written file), or... I don't know :P
Regards,
Thiago
Technically, SESSIONs and COOKIEs are just files as well, so I don't
think it's a file. Oh oh oh! I know! He's using the Force! Did I get
it right?!
I've only had a quick look but as far as I can see it's keeping the vars
in a form, the form posts to index.php so I'm guessing index.php simply
includes the script you specify on the form.
Not what I would call "pass[ing] variables between scripts" but that's
just semantics.
-Stut
And how would you do that without accessing the $_POST var anyway?
-Shawn
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