In PHP have a situation where I need the page to be mostly executed, but have an item inserted into the output from that page.
I think output buffering may be of some help, but I can't work out how to implement it in my situation.
My code looks like this:
//this document is part of a global functions file
function pageHeader (){
//I'm using $GLOBALS here because it works, however I would really rather a better method if possible
$GLOBALS['error_handler'] = new ErrorHandler(); //ErrorHandler class sets a function for set_error_handler, which gets an array of errors from the executed page
require_once($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'].'/sales/global/_header.php');
//I would like the unordered list from ->displayErrorNotice() to be displayed here, but if I do that the list is empty because the list was output before the rest of the document was executed
}
function pageFooter (){
$GLOBALS['error_handler'] ->displayErrorNotice(); //this function displays the errors as an html unordered list
include($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']."/sales/global/_footer.php");
}
Most pages on the site include this document and use the pageHeader() and pageFooter() functions. What I am trying to achieve is to put an unordered list of the PHP generated errors into an HTML list just at a point after _header.php has been included. I can get the list to work as intended if I put it in the footer (after the document has been executed), but I don't want it there. I guess I could move it with JS, but I think there must be a PHP solution.
UPDATE
I'm wondering whether a callback function for ob_start() which searches the buffer by regex where to put the error list, and then inserts it will be the solution.
UPDATE 2 I have solved the problem, my answer is below. I will accept it in 2 days when I am allowed.
Worked it out finally. The key was to buffer the output, and search the buffer for a given snippet of html, and replace it with the unordered list.
My implementation is like this:
function outputBufferCallback($buffer){
return str_replace("<insert_errors>", $GLOBALS['error_handler']->returnErrorNotice(), $buffer);
}
function pageHeader (){
ob_start('outputBufferCallback');
//I'm using $GLOBALS here because it works, however I would really rather a better method if possible
$GLOBALS['error_handler'] = new ErrorHandler(); //ErrorHandler class sets a function for set_error_handler, which gets an array of errors from the executed page
require_once($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'].'/sales/global/_header.php');
echo '<insert_errors>'; //this snippet is replaced by the ul at buffer flush
}
function pageFooter (){
include($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']."/sales/global/_footer.php");
ob_end_flush();
}
If I'm getting this right, you're trying to insert some calculated code/errors between the header and footer. I'm guessing that the errors are being totalled/summed up at the very end of the page and would be completed after the page footer.
If this is true, I can't think of anyway to do this with pure php. It can only run through a page once, and cannot double back. What you can do is create an element after the footer and move it using javascript to the area where you want to display it. This would be the easiest way I would think. You can do this easily with jquery.
I can explain further if I am on the right track, but I'm not 100% sure what you're asking yet...
The jquery command you would use is .appendTo().
Related
I am using wordpress for a web site. I am using snippets (my own custom php code) to fetch data from a database and echo that data onto my web site.
if($_GET['commentID'] && is_numeric($_GET['commentID'])){
$comment_id=$_GET['commentID'];
$sql="SELECT comments FROM database WHERE commentID=$comment_id";
$result=$database->get_results($sql);
echo "<dl><dt>Comments:</dt>";
foreach($result as $item):
echo "<dd>".$item->comment."</dd>";
endforeach;
echo "</dl>";
}
This specific page reads an ID from the URL and shows all comments related to that ID. In most cases, these comments are texts. But some comments should be able to point to other pages on my web site.
For example, I would like to be able to input into the comment-field in the database:
This is a magnificent comment. You should also check out this other section for more information
where getURLtoSectionPage() is a function I have declared in my functions.php to provide the static URLs to each section of my home page in order to prevent broken links if I change my URL pattern in the future.
I do not want to do this by using eval(), and I have not been able to accomplish this by using output buffers either. I would be grateful for any hints as to how I can get this working as safely and cleanly as possible. I do not wish to execute any custom php code, only make function calls to my already existing functions which validates input parameters.
Update:
Thanks for your replies. I have been thinking of this problem a lot, and spent the evening experimenting, and I have come up with the following solution.
My SQL "shortcode":
This is a magnificent comment. You should also check out this other section for more information
My php snippet in wordpress:
ob_start();
// All my code that echo content to my page comes here
// Retrieve ID from url
// Echo all page contents
// Finished generating page contents
$entire_page=ob_get_clean();
replaceInternalLinks($entire_page);
PHP function in my functions.php in wordpress
if(!function_exists("replaceInternalLinks")){
function replaceInternalLinks($reference){
mb_ereg_search_init($reference,"\[custom_func:([^\]]*):([^\]]*)\]");
if(mb_ereg_search()){
$matches = mb_ereg_search_getregs(); //get first result
do{
if($matches[1]=="getURLtoSectionPage" && is_numeric($matches[2])){
$reference=str_replace($matches[0],getURLtoSectionPage($matches[2]),$reference);
}else{
echo "Help! An unvalid function has been inserted into my tables. Have I been hacked?";
}
$matches = mb_ereg_search_regs();//get next result
}while($matches);
}
echo $reference;
}
}
This way I can decide which functions it is possible to call via the shortcode format and can validate that only integer references can be used.
I am safe now?
Don't store the code in the database, store the ID, then process it when you need to. BTW, I'm assuming you really need it to be dynamic, and you can't just store the final URL.
So, I'd change your example comment-field text to something like:
This is a magnificent comment. You should also check out this other section for more information
Then, when you need to display that text, do something like a regular expression search-replace on 'href="#comment-([0-9]+)"', calling your getURLtoSectionPage() function at that point.
Does that make sense?
I do not want to do this by using eval(), and I have not been able to accomplish this by using output buffers either. I would be grateful for any hints as to how I can get this working as safely and cleanly as possible. I do not wish to execute any custom php code, only make function calls to my already existing functions which validates input parameters.
Eval is a terrible approach, as is allowing people to submit raw PHP at all. It's highly error-prone and the results of an error could be catastrophic (and that's without even considering the possibly that code designed by a malicious attacker gets submitted).
You need to use something custom. Possibly something inspired by BBCode.
It's specifically i'm developing a plugin but stuck to edit the front end html. Is there any filter or function of wordpress to edit the html of a page?
Basically, WordPress is not built in a way to allow you that. It just goes on pushing its output whenever it wants, and when any of your filters is executed it is either before any output happened (so you have nothing to modify) or after (so it is already gone away to the browser).
There is an option which you could try: using output buffering. You can start your own output buffer on init, catch it on shutdown, and use this last opportunity to modify the output.
The general outline is as follows:
add_action('init', 'ob_start');
add_action('shutdown', function () {
$html = ob_get_clean();
$hmtl = morbvel_modify_html($html);
echo $html;
});
AFAIR, WordPress already has an action on shutdown which cleans all output buffers. It is up to you to check its source code to see what priority to assign to your shutdown hook to make it work.
PS. As a WordPress user myself I wouldn't like a plugin to do something like this - I'll be afraid that your code spoils something in my awesome html output I have carefully crafted. But you may turn out as lucky as to find your faithful customers.
To put my question into context, I'm working on an entirely static website where 'post' pages are created by myself manually - there's no CMS behind it. Each page will require a <pre> <code> block to display code as text in a styled block. This could be very few - several which is why I'm trying to do this for ease.
Here's what I've done -
function outputCode($code) {
return "<pre class='preBlock'><code class='codeBlock'>".htmlentities($code)."</code></pre>";
}
The code works as expected and produces an expected outcome when it's able to grab code. My idea is to somehow wrap the code for the code block with this function and echo it out for the effect, fewer lines and better readability.
As I'm literally just creating pages as they're needed, is there even a way to create the needed code blocks with such function to avoid having to manually repeat all the code for each code block? Cheers!
EDIT:
I was previously using this function and it was working great as I was pulling code from .txt documents in a directory and storing the code for code blocks in a variable with file_get_contents(). However, now, I'm trying to get the function to work by manually inputting the code into the function.
Well. Wrapping the function input in ' ' completely slipped my mind! It works just fine now!
If I understand correctly, you want to re-use your outputCode function in several different PHP files, corresponding to posts. If yes, you could put this 1 function in its own file, called outputcode.php for example, and then do
include "outputcode.php";
in every post/PHP file that needs to re-use this function. This will pull in the code, from the one common/shared file, for use in each post/PHP file that needs it. Or maybe I'm misreading your last paragraph :(
I have a PHP page where the header and footer are PHP includes.
I want to know if there is any possibility of the includes loading asynchronously - or does PHP gather all the files required, compile them and send them as one file?
The reason I ask is that I've seen an interesting PHP app that seemed to keep the connection open and do things in sequence before closing the connection - I wondered if that's what happens with includes.
PHP version is 5.3.6
EDIT:
What I actually want is for the page to load all at once, to prevent my layout mashing as each bit loads. Sorry to any who misunderstood this
PHP does gather and compile them; everything goes to the browser as a single document. If you don't want this, you'll have to do something with XMLHTTPRequest on the frontend
Generally any output will be output as it is generated.
echo 'A';
sleep(1000);
echo 'B';
sleep(1000);
echo 'C';
This slowly outputs "ABC". Includes are included when they are encountered, the same way echo outputs anything at that specific point. It's all in order, never asynchronously.
A web server may buffer all output before sending any of it to the client. In the above example, you'd receive "ABC" all together after 2 seconds of nothing.
If your objective is to receive all the page at once you need to use ob_start() and ob_end_flush(). Do something like:
ob_start();
...
write all your outputs
...
ob_end_flush();
This will force the server to buffer the output until the whole page is prepared.
Good luck!
I use the following architecture when loading a page on my application:
index.php
<script src="path/to/js/lib/jslib.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
window.addEvent('load', function()
{
BuildPg(PgStatus); //PgStatus is a variable I use in a state machine to build different pages
});
<form>
<div id="DivPgTop"></div>
<div id="DivPgMiddle"></div>
<div id="DivPgBottom"></div>
</form>
This is the entire index.php
In my jslib.js I have functions like:
function BuildPg(Pg) {
BuildPgTop(Pg);
BuildPgMiddle(Pg);
BuildPgBottom(Pg);
}
function BuildPgTop(Pg) {
var Content="";
if (Pg == 1) {
Content = function_a(); // function_a builds the top of the page
else if (Pg == 2) {
Content = function_b();
etc...
}
document.getElementById("DivPgTop").innerHTML = Content; //here is where I load the top of the page
}
And I do the same for the other parts of the page Middle and Bottom.
Using this framework, if you changed my BuildPg() function to something like:
function BuildPg(Pg) {
BuildPgTop(Pg);
sleep(foo);
BuildPgMiddle(Pg);
sleep(bar);
BuildPgBottom(Pg);
}
Your user would experience the top of the page loading first, a delay, the middle of the page, another delay, and the bottom.
And if you change the order of the function calls you could even have the bottom of the page load first, then the middle and the top.
I hope this makes sense. Good luck!
PHP sends a single document. What you want to do is achieved with something called AJAX (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ajax_%28programming%29)
Basically you write some JavaScript code that uses XMLHTTPRequest object to connect to the server and download some extra info.
At the end of a page, if something occurs, it needs to be cleared, then the entire page needs to be re-parsed before serving to the client. I was going to echo out a javascript to refresh the page, but that will make them load the page and then reload it...I was wondering if there was a way to just tell the php engine to go back to the beginning and re-parse the entire page?
Thanks!
I will try to explain the problem more clearly but it is complicated and I am a terrible communicator. I on the page that lists products I am giving users the option to select fields to narrow the results. The system remembers this so they don't have to keep selected them. If they narrow a category like metal color and then go to a category that metal color is irrelevant like crystal figurines it will not show any results because none will match the metal color chosen. To generate the query to pull the products from the data-base is very complicated because different categories have different requirements to find the correct products. so once the query is generated I want to test it against mysql_num_rows() and if there is no results clear out the users choices and start over.
You're being a little vague, but if you're merely talking about reparsing the output, you could do that using output buffering.
I'm not entirely clear what the issue is, but couldn't you decide what is to be shown before creating the HTML, and then send the right thing the first time?
To generate the query to pull the products from the data-base is very complicated because different categories have different requirements to find the correct products. so once the query is generated I want to test it against mysql_num_rows() and if there is no results clear out the users choices and start over.
In that case, just put the query inside a function that returns the result, check the row count, and if it's zero clear the filters and call that function a second time.
Output buffering (ob_start and ob_clean), combined with separating the functionality at hand into a separate file and eval()'ing that should do the trick.
Oh, and recent PHP versions actually have a goto statement... although I'll always deny mentioning anything about it. :-)
I think you're going about it a little bit off.
What you should do to reparse the page is to redirect the user to the page again, using
header('Location: thepagefile.php');
however if you actually would like to reparse the file without creating a new page, you could also just include the file again:
include thepagefile.php
But you'd probably get the same result. If you want to actually parse the output of the page you'd do something like:
ob_start(); // this is at the very top of the code/page
// all the code goes here
$output = ob_get_clean();
eval($output); // WTF?
but that actually makes no sense, but I hope it helps.
I'd actually like to know what the real problem you're trying to solve really is.
I think your looking for something like this:
<?php
ob_start(); //we start output buffering, this means nothing is send to the browser
//We do some code stuff
$time = microtime();
echo "Hai \n"; //Note taht mixing logic and output in real life
echo $time; // is terribly practice
echo "\n bai"; //I do it here purely for the example
if(/*some condition */){
$anErrorHappened = true;
}
if($anEroorHappened === true){
//Load the output in a var if you need it
//Otherwise don't
$output = ob_get_clean();
//Do other code stuff
//I.E. send an error page
include('errorPage.html');
}
else{
ob_end_flush(); //Send everything the script has echo()'d, print()'ed and send to the browser in any other way (I.E. readfile(), header() etc.)
}
?>