On my website I use a pagination (similar to that one on the bottom of this page) for MySQL output. For the change of the current page I use GET method (variable page) and it works well.
However, on my page I have also a form, using method POST, which acts as a filter for the MySQL output. This rises a problem because, when I change the form settings an submit them (POST), the page in the address line (GET) remains the same. This is problem in some cases when the filtered output has less pages than that one currently set.
Is it somehow possible to set the page variable to 0 always when the form is submitted?
Particularly, I did it using $_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'] == 'POST'. However, this changes just the variable in the code. Not at the address line.
On the other hand I want to keep the POST variable when I change the page of the output.
Thanks in advance.
There is a logical collision in your setup:
Unlike GET method, POST method doesn't keep variables in the address bar. But for some reason you are using POST method.
So, the solution is quite simple - use GET method for the filtering.
To create pagination links use http_build_query() out of $_GET array
In fact it's better to send filter criteria in the address (GET method). It will solve your problem with pagination and you (and your users) will have a direct link to search results.
In your PHP code, you want to redirect to the URL with the page GET parameter removed if you are SUBMITTING (by pressing the "Filter" button, or whatever it's called). So it will start at page 0.
You would have to rewrite the URL yourself (or using a plugin).
Typo corrected, I meant page 0, not 1 :P
Related
I am fairly new to using PHP so bear with me if this is a stupid question
I have a form that comprises a number of radio buttons, the action is set to redirect to the same page and the method is GET.
A click on a radio button gets data from the database. The data is used to redisplay the same page with changed content.
The page URL has PHP arguments in it like the example below
localhost/basesite/mypage.php?itemID=8&name=city&number=9
When I access the page and click on a radio button I get a page with “no arg” because the URL reads
localhost/basesite/mypage.php?number=6
Two of the arguments are missing and that the last one is incorrect.
With no change whatsoever to the code except using ”post’ instead of “get” the whole thing works flawlessly.
I have used
form action= "" method=“get”
form action= “#” method=“get”
and many other actions using $_SERVER["REQUEST_URI”], $_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'] etc and combinations thereof.
Those that worked with POST did not work with GET.
I do not need to use POST as data is not written only retrieved from the database so I have no worry about data being written more than once.
If I have to I will use POST but if the user refreshes or uses the back button then the usual warnings will be issued by the browser.
What am I missing?
you should you use $.get which is a jquery method.
First, you should share your full source code for better understanding your problem. And also you have to use post method to submit a radio button values to get some value from your database. Form data can be submitted using these two methods (get and post). Both are used for the same purpose, but stands apart under some specifications. As in GET method key values are passed in the Url while in POST, the information transfers in a hidden manner.
Sorry folks. It was a badly formed URL due to me not fully understanding how to set a hidden element.
I'm working on big site and it has filtering of cars in it. I'll explain how the form filtering works:
so the user chooses filter options, car number and so and presses go, which makes GET request to server (php) i've changed every variable from $_GET to $_POST and changed form submission method, the problem is that when form returns big number of items it might have more than 2 pages, so when the user clicks on second or third page all this code does is add page number to the request like this: www.example.com/GET_REQUEST_VARIABLES -> www.example.com/pagenumber&GET_REQUEST_VARIABLES. that way server returns second page items and so.
but when i send post request, it isn't saved in the url so server doesn't know what to return,
can you help me solve this problem?
i can explain better if you ask questions i don't know if i explained clearly here
Is there a reason you are using POST instead of GET? Using GET is more SEO friendly in this case. And since you aren't sending sensitive data in the form submission, I don't see a reason to use POST. Another advantage of using GET is that you can directly link to search results. (For instance, if I search for a Honda Fit, and want to show my wife, I have a direct link to the page)
(Look HERE for a bullet-point explination of the difference bewteen POST and GET).
To answer your other question, POST does not use the URL. Only GET does So if you need the form data to be serialized into the URL, you'll need to use GET. Since you changed the form submission method to POST, you'll need to change the server side logic as well to accommodate. I can't be of much use without knowing what server-side technology you are using. Assuming you are using PHP, you could start here
If you aren't much for MAN pages, just change all the $_GET['fieldName'] calls in PHP to $_POST['fieldName']
You could always POST the first page, and use GET ONLY for the page number. In the form you would just do this
<form method="post" action="www.foo.com/search?page=1">
Then you can store your POSTed variables into the $_SESSION super-global. BOOM. POSTed pagination. It would be a breeze to render it on the fly with PHP
$nextPageURL = 'www.foo.com/search?page=' . $_GET['page'] + 1;
if($_GET['page'] !== '0'){
$lastPageURL = 'www.foo.com/search?page=' . $_GET['page'] - 1;
}
Using PHP (for the first time in my life) and working in a CMS environment without access to the back-end PHP pages or code, I created a form on one page that places four parameters into the url of the next page to which the form send its data.
Here is the form page:
http://CMSDetroit.org/480
Here is the url the form generates:
http://www.chambermusicdetroit.org/422?School=formdata&Grade=formdata&Teacherformdata=&Handle=formdata
I need to collect the parameter information from the url and pass it on to the url of the next page after this one, either by putting a command into every link on the page (422), or through some other more efficient method.
I've tried all sorts of things and keep coming up dry...help!?!
For PHP see $_SERVER and more specifically QUERY_STRING
Then with that I'm not sure how you are invoking the next page? maybe with header?
header('Location: http://www.example.com/?' . $_SERVER['QUERY_STRING');
exit;
Point being it is just one large string. If you don't know already you use $_GET and key to extract the individual values or if you want you can use explode on the QUERY STRING
I just setup some pagination for a search, and the search uses POST variables to define what to search for etc. In my URL I can set the pagination offset like this search/OFFSET, and my links in the pagination link there correctly. However, when I click a link all POST variables vanish even if I explicitly set them so I can use them in the next script. I'm using codeigniter and I have GET turned off and really don't want to store these 5-6 values in a session since then it will get all clumsy.
Does clicking a link fully reload the page and delete POST variables?
Thanks
Yes, clicking a link creates a GET request so wouldn't keep any of the POST data. Although it's technically possible to do so with javascript, that's a bad idea.
This is an entirely appropriate use of GET, please read this fuller explanation.
Yes, clicking a link removes all the POST variables.
Do you have access to change your php page that receives the request? You might want to adjust your variables there to accept either GET or POST:
$defaultvalue='';//change this to '' or NULL or whatever you want
$searchQuery = (isset($_POST['s']) ? $_POST['s'] : (isset($_GET['s'])?$_GET['s']: $defaultvalue));
Then your php page will be better equipped to handle either GET or POST
POST data will only be present during the original request (i.e. it does not persist between requests). If you want data to persist, use sessions. However, it is common practice to use GET for search queries and pages.
You could use an incredibly ugly workaround and set a form full of hidden fields to submit when you click a link. I really wouldn't recommended it though.
You should be able to create a form that submits some set of post variables to the action parameter with the get variables. So the form should submit a post request to http://www.somedomain.com/FormSubmit.php?pag=1&sort=asc This would submit the post values of that form along with the get values of the string. If you can change your link to a form button, you should be good to go.
My problem is that the back button causes the browser to say something like "Page expired" when the previous page was created by a form.
Example:
page1: form submitted with search
criterias ($_POST request, form
points to page2)
page2: Receives $_POST request and
show result (list of user with links,
points to page3)
page3: Show user profile
Now when the visitor clicks the back button in the browser it will show something like "Page expired".
Instead the previous page should be shown with no warnings (page2, with the userlist)
How are your strategies to get around this behavior?
If you are submitting a form with search parameters, you are trying to get some data, not modify some.
So, you should use the HTTP GET method, and not POST : POST should be used when you intend to create/modify data, and GET should be used when you intend to fetch some data.
Or, if you have some create/modify operation that has to be done :
The form first POSTs to a first page
That page does some operations (like writing something to a database)
And then redirects to another page, using a Location HTTP header.
It's that last page, that's queries by the browser using a GET requests, that displays the data fetched from the parameters received in the URL.
See the Post/Redirect/Get page on wikipedia, about this.
Use the Post/Redirect/Get (PRG) Pattern.
This applies to PHP and IE8.
Not only must you set cacheing to private, but you must remove the 4 cacheing headers and this can only be done with PHP 5.3. In PHP 5.2 you can only set the 4 headers to blank values if using the Zend Framework's setHeader() method. For some reason is not sufficient on IE8 to set the 4 header values to empty values. Here's the code for PHP 5.3:
header_remove("Expires");
header_remove("Cache-Control");
header_remove("Pragma");
header_remove("Last-Modified");
Send a Location header in the script you POSTed to, pointing to the page that comes after.
Don't use POST for search. Search can safely be done with GET since it won't alter anything.
You can use session to do this.
eg.
$_SESSION['name'] = $_POST['name'];
Remember to unset your variables after the process is complete to optimize memory usage.