Aziz Saleh wrote:
On Tue, Dec 24, 2013 at 9:51 PM, atar <atar.yosef@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
At Christoph Michael Becker:
Thanks you for your advice! it solved the problem.
But I didn't succeed to understand HOW the action of dropping the script
argument from the command line was worked? why does PHP complain about
the
undefined $_GET['r'] variable when the test.php script is used as
router?
Regards,
atar.
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In PHP, when you try to access a variable and that variable doesn't
exist,
it throws a notice. In your case the router.php was executed with no r
GET
param, causing the notice.
You can duplicate that by accessing: http://127.0.0.1:8000/test.php
(notice
the r GET param is not set).
As a good practice you should always use isset() before trying to access
a
param that might not be set:
if (isset($_GET['r'])) {
// use it
}
But why when I use the 'test.php' script as a router, the $_GET['r'] index
isn't get defined? that's what wonder me.
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