hi i am using ajax for loading pages, and also for back button facilities. everything is worked fine except one. Well i narrowed down my problem but cant get any solution. my main page has a container div where i load most of the pages without reloading the whole pages like in gmail.
as for pjax it also loads tags for seo friendly url.
but there is a div in the main page contains "<?php echo $pagename; ?>" it gets the pagename from the loaded page and showed it in the div. well it worked only if the browser reloads. otherwise when i open pages continuously it does not change, it shows the previous one.
so how do i fix this issue. i am thinking about refreshing the div that contains the pagename. so how do i do that?
PHP code is always executed on the server side, so this div won't change when you use pjax. You need to change the pagename div manually as you do with the content div. You can do this with 2 pjax calls, or by splitting the ajax response into pagename and content (but maybe then pjax is not the right solution).
You can send a ajax request to the file that contains echo $pagename and display the response(which would be $pagename) using javascript.
Since you are using jquery, you can use $.ajax for this purpose.
Here is the code
$.ajax({
type = "POST",
url = "your-php-file-path",
}).done(function(response){
$("#div-id").html(response);
});
Related
I need to get content from ANOTHER SERVER web page, but when I use file_get_content($url), URL won't show up for certain page probably because it isn't loaded yet.
Is there any option to get content if page loads dynamically for couple of seconds?
For example, I need to load oddsportal.com/matches with all matches and odds, but when U use file_get_content('oddsportal.com/matches') in my PHP code, these things won't show up. Why? Probably cause of dynamic content loading.
Maybe I can load content into an iframe and then wait for completely load and on someway get content from iframe?
Use JQuery for this.
<div id="url-contents"></div>
<script>
$( "#url-contents" ).load( "your/url.html" );
</script>
Hi I have a PHP page loading in a DIV tag from a javascript function. I also have a button on this PHP page that sends information to another PHP page. I was using header to go back to the page I was on (still in the div tag) but I was wondering if there is a way to reload the original parent page. The pages are all saved in separate files so I was unsure how to do this. I have tried using Javascript such as top, window, and opener for location.reload() e.g.
top.location.reload()
window.location.reload()
and saving the function on each page as
function myFunctio(){
location.reload();
} and then calling it on each page again using top, window, and opener but nothing has worked. If I use a header it will only load the page in the DIV.
You can use them in sequence to get the result you're looking for give something like window.opener.location.reload(false); a try
To be clear - Ive already checked other Questions about refreshing div and the ideas I found were not exactly what I look for.
My site is made of plenty pages with the same header and footer (top, bottom, menu on both sides). I use smarty templates, and the Whole action of every page happens in one <div id="content">.
My users use to refresh most of those pages many times to do an action they've already done once again. With refreshing browser loads again header, footer, viewed page etc. I would like to bring them the button (instead of F5) which will refresh just a current content page (e.g. account.php) without refreshing whole site.
One of plenty structure:
<?php
$title = 'OneOfPlenty';
require_once("includes/head.php");
{
Whole action
}
require_once("includes/foot.php");
?>
header.tpl ends with <div id="content"> then comes
onofplenty.tpl and then in
footer.tpl I got </div> (close the content)
Here comes the question: Is it even possible? Am I able to create such a flexible button which will recognize which page is being displayed and will "know" to refresh just the content of this page?
Any ideas and help will be aprreciated.
Thank you
TTed
You could do an Ajax call with jQuery to get the output html of the tpl file of the page.
You could use an Ajax call, e.g. by using the jQuery get() function, e.g. like this
$.get("includes/account.php", function(data) {
$("#content").html(data);
alert("Load was performed.");
});
If you saved some kind of variable, either to session or to a data-content on your div. Just so you know which page you are on. Say if you are on account.php you set $('#content').attr("data-content", "account"). Then if you press the refresh button you could use an ajax get on $('#content').attr("data-content") + 'php' to re-import the data. Could be done with a SESSION variable as well.
I have a page where if you click on a link, it exposes a div that using ajax displays content from a dbase.
After a user edits this content on the server, I'd like to use PHP to return the user to that page. This is no problem using a redirect
header("location:page.php")
However, when the user comes back to the page, ideally, I'd like to have the content in the div open automatically so the user can immediately see edits without having to find the link to open the div and click on it.
Is this possible, either with something in the url to fire the javascript or alternaively, when you load the page with a certain parameter, triggering javascript to open the div.
The code to open the div is a simple javascript call:
View Content
showDiv just uses ajax to display something from the server using responsetext.
Thanks for any suggestions
header("location:page.php?show=1")
Then in page.php body tag:
<body <?php if($_GET['show']==1) { ?>onload="showDiv()"<?php } ?>>
Basically, I want the same effect as the oldschool html 'frameset' I think.
Take a look at this page please:
http://onomadesign.com/wordpress/identity-design/alteon-a-boeing-company/
If a user selects a project from industry -> transportation for example, I would like that the right scrollmenu keeps its initial state when the new project page comes up. So they won't get lost and have to click again to be in the same submenu section.
So, the right thumbnail navigation should stay in the same way, I don't want it to reload.
Do I have to do it with frames or iframes? Or can I make some kind of jQuery call to 'not reload' that div? Maybe PHP? I'm sorry, I am not a programmer from origin.
Update:
Guys, I managed to put the whole thumbnail navigation code into a seperate php file, called sidebar.php. Now this gets called in my single.php (Wordpress) by <?php get_sidebar(); ?>.
Should it now be easier to make this sidebar.php NOT refresh on page reload? I've been looking at cookies, php sessions, iframes.. but I can't get it to work.
Any more help would be greatly appreciated!
Facebook kinda does this without frames for optimization's sake. They take every single link and, if supported, using AJAX to load the page content without reloading the layout.
Obviously, this sort of thing may require significant restructuring of the internals of your app. Another option is to simply store the menu's state as a cookie on link click (see the jQuery Cookie plugin) and, on every reload, either have Javascript look at the cookie and dynamically restore the menu to its correct state, or use your internal PHP to read the cookie and decide what menu to display.
But if you get really desperate, you may end up falling back on frames. Sometimes that can be okay - but try everything else first :)
You also can detect what menu item was activated (you got the page request due to clicking on the corresponding link) and use this information to restore/select this menu item.
At least that is what I do and... No cookies or AJAX required!
You can use a technique known as "AHAH" Asynchronous HTML and HTTP. Essentially you're doing a jQuery
$.post("whatever.html",function(data) {
$("contentdivelement").html(data);
}
You can wrap this in a function like:
updateContent(sPage) {
$.post(sPage,function(data) {
$("contentdivelement").html(data);
}
}
This will load the content from your "frame" page into the div without reloading the page.
You can also bind to each of the navigation links and use their HREF as your path to load in your content div such as:
$(".menuLink").click(function() {
var menuLink = $(this).attr('href');
updateContent(menuLink);
/* prevents the browser from taking the parent to that link */
return false;
});
ADDITION:
Your menu may look like this:
<ul class="myMenu">
<li>Frame 1</li>
<li>Frame 2</li>
</ul>
Also,
If you want it to remember the page you're on you can use cookies or #anchors. There are many ways to add "tab" or "menu" anchors but one way would just be to use a jQuery plugin.
The most COMMON and TRENDY way to do it is to use #anchors. Your browser address bar ass #frame1 to the end so when the page is refreshed or reloaded it will load up "frame1" automatically with some additional code.
You can even called the anchor #/frame1.html and read the anchor in
$(document).ready(function() {
/* you'll need to either use a plugin or parse out the anchor from your current browser address bar */
updateContent(anchorContentVar);
});
Instead of updating your content using click-handlers I suggest a slightly different approach. Just replace your hyperlinks with this kind of link:
#info_page
Now set up a simple interval that reads out the current URL and updates the DIV accordingly:
__LOC = document.location.href;
setInterval(function(){
if (__LOC!=document.location.href) __LOC=document.location.href;
var fetchURL = __LOC.split("#")[1];
$.get( "/getcontent/"+fetchURL, function(d){ $("#mydiv").html( d ); } )
} 1000);
This allows visitors to use bookmarks as well.