On Friday 31 January 2003 11:40, Matt Palermo wrote: > Thanks. I tried that, and maybe I am doing something wrong with it, but > it didn't work. What I did was I made a counter variable, $counter and > put it outside the while loop. Then, inside the while loop, when it > makes a checkbox, I named the check box, $CheckBox[$counter], so that it ^^^^^^^^^ That should be CheckBox and not $CheckBox (that latter, as per your code, is undefined and is empty). > would put it at that spot in an array. Then on the following page > (which the variables get posted to) I created a for loop to output all > the values of $CheckBox[]. I made the loop from 0 to < $counter, and it > still doesn't output anything. ********************************************* * "If in doubt, print everything out" (TM). * ********************************************* print_r($GLOBALS) should give you all you need to know. Or more specifically, to find out what values your forms are returning you can use: print_r($_POST) or print_r($_GET) depending on the 'method' that your form uses. And whilst we're on the subject, you don't seem to have any <form> tags? Some browsers (quite rightly) ignore form elements if there are no <form> tags. > Do I need to initialize the $CheckBox > array or something, if so, how do I do it? No. > Here is the modified code > that I used for this: [snip] > <input type='checkbox' name='$CheckBox[$counter]' value='ON'></td> That should be: ... name='CheckBox[$counter]' ... -- Jason Wong -> Gremlins Associates -> www.gremlins.biz Open Source Software Systems Integrators * Web Design & Hosting * Internet & Intranet Applications Development * /* 1 1 was a race-horse, 2 2 was 1 2. When 1 1 1 1 race, 2 2 1 1 2. */ -- PHP Database Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php