I've got a web server running IIS7 and I just updated to PHP 5.3. I have two sites that seem to run fine, and they both use some small degree of PHP. The revision I am currently testing on this server, presumably uses much... much more.
The problem I am encountering is that on my testing server ( a local XAMPP installation ), my page loads fine. When I push this to my server and hit the page in my browser, I get the following:
Id ) return true; } return false; } public static function PrintSelector($SelectionArray) { if( !isset($SelectionArray)) { Page::WriteLine("
No selections are available.
"); } else { $FoundViewer = false; foreach($SelectionArray as $Selection) { if( $Selection->IsViewing()) { $ViewerSelection = $Selection; $FoundViewer = true; } } if( $FoundViewer ) { Page::WriteLine("Show / Hide " . get_class($Selection) . " Selections"); $ViewerSelection->PrintOverview(); Page::WriteLine("
"); } Page::WriteLine("\n"); foreach($SelectionArray as $Selection) if( $Selection->IsSelectable() && !$Selection->IsViewing()) $Selection->PrintSelection(); Page::WriteLine("
\n"); if( $FoundViewer ) Page::WriteLine("
"); } } } ?>
Which is just a bit of the underlying code for my new site.
Upon further investigation, I run down to one of my other sites and get this:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
<title>AGP Credential Manager</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="styles.css" type="text/css" />
<script type="text/javascript">
function submitPageForm()
{
document.forms["pageForm"].submit();
}
function submitForm(formName)
{
document.forms[formName].submit();
}
</script>
<script language="javascript">
function toggleDiv(divid){
if(document.getElementById(divid).style.display == 'none'){
document.getElementById(divid).style.display = 'block';
}else{
document.getElementById(divid).style.display = 'none';
}
}
</script></head>
<body>
<div id="wrap">
<div class="header">
<!-- TITLE -->
<h1>AGP Credential Manager</h1>
<!-- END TITLE -->
</div>
<div id="nav">
<ul>
<!-- MENU -->
In the source code. And as I'm sure you can presume, not much for my front-end. It seems as if the PHP starts executing, but fails some couple hundred lines in... for no apparent reason.
Curious if anyone has seen this before and happens to know the fix? Would be great. Thanks.
IIS and Apache are two different beasts. For you own sanity, strive to keep your development environment close to your deployment environment.
I suspect the issue may be that your PHP script uses short tags <? but the PHP configuration is such that it does not accept short tags and wants full tags <?php.
You can either change php.ini and set short_open_tag to 1 or modify the scripts to use the full open tag. I would recommend using the full open tag as the short tags have problems with XML files with PHP extensions.
You will also want to check for short echo's, <?= and replace those with <?php echo.
Some regex you may try:
/<?([^p])/<?php$1/g
/<?= /<?php echo /g
Related
I am a PHP beginner and trying to write PHP classes that work with HTML and MySql.
I am facing the following problem,
I have created a class called DatabaseManager that contains the function get_value. This function simply returns a value. In another file, I am calling this function on a button click using java script. But the link doesn't seem to work between the two files....Can someone help me?
thank you.
Here's my file that contains the PHP class.
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<meta content="text/html; charset=utf-8" http-equiv="Content-Type" />
<title>Untitled 1</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
class DatabaseManager {
private $value=1;
public function get_value ()
{
return value;
}
}
/php>
</body>
</html>
and here's the other file that calls it.
<html>
<head>
<?php include("DatabaseManager.php"); ?>
<script type="text/javascript">
function connect()
{
<?php
$database_manager= new DatabaseManager;
echo "the value is" . $database_manager->get_value();
?>
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<input type="button" value="Search " onclick="connect()">
</body>
</html>
The name of the file that contains the function get_value is DatabaseManager.php
DO Like this
In Databasemanager.php
<?php
class DatabaseManager {
private $value = 1;
public function get_value() {
return $this->value;
}
}
?>
In another PHP file
<html>
<head>
<?php include("Databasemanager.php"); ?>
<script type="text/javascript">
function connect()
{
<?php
$database_manager= new DatabaseManager;
echo "the value is" . $database_manager->get_value();
?>
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<input type="button" value="Search " onclick="connect()">
</body>
</html>
A few things:
in DatabaseManager.php remove all HTML. You're including the file elsewhere, you don't need or want duplicated HTML tags.
Remove the # in your MySQL section. This suppresses any errors you are having.
Switch to PDO or MySQLi. They are safer (if used properly)
Your closing php tag is wrong in the database file. You have /php> it should be ?>
Your class does absolutely nothing as-is.
There are multiple things here that you're douing wrong.
You don't need the html code in the first example.
You close the php wrong /php> should generate an error, it should be ?>
When your instantiating your DatabaseManager class you've left out the parentheses which means that the constructor will never get called, this should also generate an error.
You're probably trying to use alert in javascript which in this case you're not doing.
It should look something like this instead:
<?php
class DatabaseManager {
private $value = 1;
function getValue() {
return $this->value;
}
}
?>
And in your html (still php, but the one containing the html-markup) file:
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
function connect() {
alert("
<?php
include "nameofDBManagerClassFile.php"
$dbm = new DatabaseManager();
echo "the value is " . $dbm->getValue();
?>
");
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
</body>
</html>
It could also be that you think that the php-code that is inside of the javascript function will not be executed untill you call the JS function connect() this is not so. PHP code is executed on the server and thus will be called when a user requests that webpage, the javascript on the other hand is clientside and will be executed in the users browser. I highly recommend that you read up on both php and JavaScript.
You do it wrong way, to output something in your JavaScript function connect() make this :
function connect() {
alert("
<?php
$database_manager= new DatabaseManager;
echo "the value is" . $database_manager->get_value();
?>
");
}
because php code is executed apart from your on click event.
Actually it's unclear what you wish to get, but you misunderstand the basics.
[edited to clarify users question how to output something to the screen]
I think the easiest way is to use require i another file.
require('login.php');
function get_value()
{
return get_value;
}
I'm having a bit trouble here with creating a map for a browser based game like Travian. I have created a function which drags the map into different directions, but each time I click on a different position than where I released the mouse on it directly changes position and then I can move it as I want. Is there any way of solving this? Is JQuery needed? (I'm not so good at Javascript so my code might be a bit different than what the easy way around code would look like)
Full document:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
<title>Map</title>
<script type="text/javascript">
//object of the element to be moved
_item = null;
//stores x & y co-ordinates of the mouse pointer
mouse_x = 0;
mouse_y = 0;
// stores top,left values (edge) of the element
mapdiv_x = 0;
mapdiv_y = 0;
//bind the functions
function move_init()
{
document.onmousemove = _move;
document.onmouseup = _stop;
}
//destroy the object when we are done
function _stop()
{
_item = null;
}
//main functions which is responsible for moving the element (div in our example)
function _move(e)
{
mouse_x = event.offsetX?(event.offsetX):event.pageX-document.getElementById("mapdiv").backgroundPositionX;
mouse_y = event.offsetY?(event.offsetY):event.pageY-document.getElementById("mapdiv").backgroundPositionY;
if(_item != null)
{
_item.style.backgroundPosition = "-" + (mouse_x - mapdiv_x) + "px -" + (mouse_y - mapdiv_y) + "px";
}
}
//will be called when use starts dragging an element
function _move_item(mapdiv)
{
//store the object of the element which needs to be moved
_item = mapdiv;
mouse_x = event.offsetX?(event.offsetX):event.pageX-document.getElementById("mapdiv").backgroundPositionX;
mouse_y = event.offsetY?(event.offsetY):event.pageY-document.getElementById("mapdiv").backgroundPositionY;
oldmapdivx = _item.style.backgroundPositionX;
oldmapdivy = _item.style.backgroundPositionY;
mapdiv_x = oldmapdivx - mouse_x;
mapdiv_y = oldmapdivy - mouse_y;
mapdivx2 = mouse_x - mapdiv_x;
mapdivy2 = mouse_y - mapdiv_y;
}
</script>
<style type="text/css">
#mapdiv {
background-image:url('images/map.png');
background-repeat:no-repeat;
background-color:#666;
width:750px;
height:500px;
cursor: move;
}
</style>
</head>
<body onload="move_init()">
<div id="mapdiv" onmousedown="_move_item(this);"></div>
</body>
</html>
I can't see the issue in your code, unfortunately.
If you're not dead set on writing your own code for this, though, there is actually a really nice Jquery plugin that does exactly what you seem to want. It's called Overscroll (http://www.azoffdesign.com/overscroll) and provides you with all the features you'd need for a system like this. Give it a look, I've found it really useful in my own work in the past. Looking through the code might also help you find the issue in your own solution, as well.
I am trying to find the cleanest way to merge multiple html files into one html file. This way I can easily change parts of the html or show them only on certain pages. The file list is as followed:
page.tpl (header, footer, head info)
sidebar.tpl (contains sidebar and sidebar blocks)
nav.tpl(contains navigation links in nested UL)
The page.tpl file looks like this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Page Title</title>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
<meta name="author" content="Brandon" />
<meta name="robots" content="noindex,nofollow" />
<meta name="keywords" content="" />
<meta name="description" content="" />
<?php print $stylesheets; ?>
<?php print $scripts; ?>
</head>
<body>
<section id="wrapper">
<header>Header Title</header>
<nav><?print $nav; ?></nav>
<section><?php print $content; ?></section>
<aside> <?php print $sidebar; ?><aside>
<footer>© 2011 Brandon License: GPLv2</footer>
</section>
</body>
</html>
The main function I have to include everything is:
function theme($tpl, $vars = array()) {
extract($vars);
ob_start();
require($tpl);
$template = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
return $template;
}
$tpl is set to the page.tpl file.
I tried $vars['nav'] = file_get_contents('nav.tpl'); above the theme function just to give it some data to work with. If I remove the $tpl variable and the require() function, I see the UL nav list but when I add back the page.tpl file back in I get this error:
Warning: extract() expects parameter 1 to be array, null given
This works(shows UL nav list):
$vars['nav'] = file_get_contents('nav.tpl');
function theme($vars = array()) {
extract($vars);
ob_start();
$template = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
return $template;
}
This doesn't:
$vars['nav'] = file_get_contents('nav.html');
theme('page.html', $vars) //page.html is set to correct directory.
function theme($tpl, $vars = array()) {
extract($vars);
ob_start();
require($tpl);
$template = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
return $template;
}
Any help on getting this to work correctly would be appreciated.
UPDATE: This is my current index.php file:
<?php
define('ROOT_DIR', getcwd());
require_once(ROOT_DIR . '/core/includes/boot.inc');
boot_start(BOOT_FULL);
// Based off of Drupal's drupal_bootstrap(). Set's ini_set's, database
//and starts sessions. This works just fine and I haven't coded any
//theme/template code into it. The only thing boot_start() does for theme is
//load the .inc file that has the theme() function. The .inc gets included
// otherwise I would have gotten a "call to unknown function" error.
$vars['nav'] = file_get_contents(ROOT_DIR . '/core/templates/nav.tpl');
theme('./core/templates/page.tpl', $vars);
I don't quite understand why I am getting the error from extract(). When I add $vars['nav'] without including 'include($tpl)', extract works just fine. It isn't until I try to include the page.tpl file.
The page.tpl file should be loaded on every page request that outputs anything. So I think I only need theme($vars) instead of theme($tpl, $vars = array())
Is there a way I can include page.tpl without passing it to theme(), while passing $vars so that $vars['nav'] overrides the <?php print $nav; ?> tag in page.tpl? Thanks.
SOLVED: Man, I can't believe it took me this long to fix this. Since theme() returned and not echo'ed the data, I had to assign $theme = theme('page.tpl', $vars); then echo $theme; Besides a few PHP notices, it works.
I personally just like to make a file for the individual parts. and then include them.
<?php include('relative/link.php'); ?>
if you want to edit the content in a section I would use variables.
header.php
echo $foo;
index.php
$foo='bar';
include('header.php');
when we include a file it grabs the contents and injects it in the current file and then will process it.
This is more of a style question. I have a template file header.php in which I define a PrintHeader() function.
Callers of this function can specify, via global variables, the title of the page and any Javascript scripts to include when printing the header (because surely not every page will have the same title or want to include the same scripts). I chose to use global variables rather than function arguments because the latter would require the interface to change when adding new arguments.
Is this considered "good" style, and is there a "better" way to do what I'm trying to do?
header.php (simplified)
<?php
function PrintHeader()
{
global $pageTitle, $scripts; // Set by the caller of this function
echo <<<HEADER
<html>
<head>
<title>$pageTitle</title>
HEADER;
if( !empty($scripts) )
{
foreach($scripts as $script)
{
echo " <script type=\"text/javascript\" src=\"$script.js\"></script>\n";
}
}
echo " </head>\n";
}
?>
index.php (simplified)
<?php
$pageTitle = 'Welcome';
$scripts = array('script1', 'script2');
require('header.php');
PrintHeader();
// Print the rest of the page
?>
is there a "better" way to do what I'm trying to do?
sure.
I see no point in defining and calling a function at all. as well as in using heredoc.
header.php (dramatically simplified):
<html>
<head>
<title><?=$pageTitle?></title>
<? if( !empty($scripts) ): ?>
<? foreach($scripts as $script): ?>
<script type="text/javascript" src="<?=$script?>.js"></script>
<? endforeach ?>
<? endif ?>
</head>
index.php:
<?php
$pageTitle = 'Welcome';
$scripts = array('script1', 'script2');
require('header.php');
?>
but still it's not the best way, as it seems you're not using a template where it most valuable - to output page contents itself.
So, I'd make it in three parts:
links.php (simplified):
<?
//include our settings, connect to database etc.
include dirname($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']).'/cfg/settings.php';
//getting required data
$DATA = getdata("SELECT * FROM links");
$pagetitle = "Links to friend sites";
//etc
//and then call a template:
$tpl = "links.tpl.php";
include "main.tpl.php";
?>
where main.tpl.php is your main site template, including common parts, like header, footer, menu etc:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<title>My site. <?=$pagetitle?></title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="page">
<? include $tpl ?>
</div>
</body>
</html>
and finally links.tpl.php is the actual page template:
<h2><?=$pagetitle?></h2>
<ul>
<? foreach($DATA as $row): ?>
<li><?=$row['name']?></li>
<? endforeach ?>
<ul>
notice native HTML syntax, which is highlighted, readable and centralized in one place instead of being split between numerous functions and files
The point is in having separate template for the every PHP page as well as main site template for them all. With such setup you'll get a lot of advantages such as custom error pages, multiple representations of the same data (say, HTML, JSON or XML) by switching only templates without changing the code and many more
The use of global variables is certainly not advisable, and I question the necessity of using heredoc as you have - not that there is anything inherently wrong with heredoc, just that you seem to have rather arbitrarily utilized it in this sample template.
It is not elegant to use a return-value of a function as the output of each template - this defeats one of the purposes of templates which is re-usability.
Take a look at smarty, if not to directly use it (after all, why re-invent the wheel), at least to get an idea of how a rendering class is used to shuttle in the variables that a template needs without resorting to messy globals.
Here's a very quick overview of a way to do templating:
You have a template class that you can assign data to and then render a template.
Template.php:
class Template
{
protected $data = array();
public function assign($key, $value)
{
$this->data[$key] = $value;
}
public function render($file)
{
extract($this->data);
require $file;
}
}
You then have your template, header.php:
<html>
<head>
<title><?php echo $pageTitle; ?></title>
....
In index.php, you then use the template class to assign data and render your template.
$tpl = new Template;
$tpl->assign('pageTitle', 'My page title!');
$tpl->render('header.php');
This is just a simple example to demonstrate the idea, and could give you a good starting point.
While "better" may be in the eye of the beholder, I would suggest having some sort of functions that set the page bits rather than exposing raw variables. For instance, instead of doing $pageTitle = 'Welcome'; you could have set_page_title('Welcome');.
For JavaScript you could have a function that adds to the current script set -- rather than possibly replacing it all -- such as add_javascript($code);. This will allow a developer to set all of these without having to keep track of what the variable name was, and also without needing to global it as well if they want to set it from within a function.
This is an alternative using output buffering.
p/example_page/index.php is one of your pages:
<?php
ob_start() ?>
<h1>Example</h1>
<p>This is the page content</p>
<?php $main = ob_get_clean();
ob_start() ?>
<script defer src="js/example_page/example.js"></script>
<?php $script = ob_get_clean();
$title = 'Example page';
include 'templates/base.php';
templates/base.php is your reusable layout:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<script defer src="js/main.js"></script>
<?php echo $script ?>
<title><?php echo $title ?> - Example website</title>
</head>
<body>
<header>
<nav aria-label="Main menu"></nav>
</header>
<main><?php
echo $main;
?></main>
<footer>Example footer</footer>
</body>
</html>
Global variables are generally considered bad, and should be avoided if possible.
Rather than listing every variable in the interface, as you said things could change, pass a single array to the PrintHeader() functions:
<?php
function PrintHeader($opts=array()) {
if(!isset($opts['title'])) $opts['title'] = 'Default Title';
echo <<<HEADER
<html>
<head>
<title>$opts['title']</title>
HEADER;
if(!empty($opts['scripts'])) {
foreach($opts['scripts'] as $script) {
echo " <script type=\"text/javascript\" src=\"$script.js\"></script>\n";
}
}
echo " </head>\n";
}
$opts = array('title'=>'Welcome',
'scripts'=>array('script1', 'script2'));
require('header.php');
PrintHeader($opts);
?>
This way, you can add new capabilities in the function without breaking old code.
I have a PHP script that creates HTML by calling PHP class that I have created. The class creates all the HTML tags one of which is a tag that loads an external JS file. When I try to access the functions from said file nothing happens. Any Ideas?
index page:
function main(){
$content = "Heres some text for you";
$page = new Page($title="MyTitle", $script="external.js", $content=$content)
echo $page->toString();
}
function __autoload($className){
require_once $className . '.class.php';
}
class page:
//class constructor
function __construct($title='untitled', $script='', $content='Default Page class page'){
$this->title = $title;
$this->script = $script;
$this->stylesheet = $stylesheet;
$this->content = $content;
// $this->currentUser = $currentUser;
}
// creates tag structure for HTML pages
function toString(){
return <<<END
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery.js"></script>
// Heres the link to the external JS file
<script type="text/javascript" src="$this->script"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
test();
</script>
<title>$this->title</title>
<link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="$this->stylesheet" />
</head>
<body>
$this->content
<p id='content'>page content</p>
</body>
</html>
END;
}// end toString function
} // end class Page
?>
External JS:
function test(){
alert("ext. JS test works");
}
You cannot have any spaces before the ending identifier of your heredoc:
END;
should be:
END;
I would also check to make sure that the path to your external.js file is correct. Are any of the other things working? Like the title or css? You also are not passing $stylesheet into your __construct anywhere which produces an error trying to set $this->stylesheet, maybe the whole script is failing to load because of that?
Don't see anything that stands out....
Are you sure the JS file is accessible in the same directory as your script (may want to apply an absolute or relative path if necessary)?
You might also, since you have jquery (assuming it's loaded), try putting the call to test(); in an "on ready" block, like so:
$(document).ready(function () {
test();
});
Other than that, I'd use your given browsers debugging tools to see if you can glean anything useful (like the script not even being loaded as a resource).
Good luck!