I'd like to pass some data from PHP to JavaScript without JSON.
The reason is because I don't want the data been readable by anyone if clicks on view page source.
So, I have a PHP like
print(<script type="text/javascript">a = "aaa";</script>);
In my HTML code this will be
<script type="text/javascript">a = "aaa";</script>
I can remove this in the client side, after loading the variable. By for example with jquery
$('script[type="text/javascript"]').remove();
And after the DOM will not have anymore the script tag, but the variable a.
Later if I type to the console window.a will be aaa.
But i do not want to show the <script type="text/javascript">a = "aaa";</script> in my HTML source code. Is this possible, to pass the PHP variable directly to the DOM?
Thanks for the help.
JavaScript is a client-side language. Whatever you pass to it (by whatever means) will be readable by the end user.
Removing the Script DOM won't help, as "view source" shows the HTML code as it was during download. If that is what you are concerned about, you can fetch the variable via an AJAX once the DOM has been loaded.
(But it still is readable by anyone who can read JavaScript (an re-run the AJAX call), use Firebug or Wireshark. It really only helps against a simple "view source".)
Related
I’m trying to store the content of a div to a variable.
Example:
<div class="anything">
<p>We don't know the content of this div</p>
</div>
I want to search for <div class="anything"> and store everything between opening and the end tag.
We also want to avoid using absolute pathnames, so that it only searches the current HTML/PHP file for this div where the code is present.
Is this possible with PHP, or is this only possible with JavaScript ?
PHP is not that intelligent. He doesn't even know what he says.
PHP is a server-side language. It has absolutely NO clue about what the DOM (ie. what is displayed in your browser's window) is when it delivers a page. Yeah I know, PHP rendered the DOM, so how could it not know what's in there?
Simply put, let's say that PHP doesn't have a memory of what he renders. He just knows that at one particular moment, he is delivering strings of characters, but that's all. He kind of doesn't get the big picture. The big picture goes to the client and is called the DOM. The server (PHP) forgets it immediately as he's rendering it.
Like a red fish.
To do that, you need JavaScript (which is on the client's computer, and therefore has complete access to the rendered DOM), or if you want PHP to do this, you have to retrieve an full-rendered page first.
So the only way to do what you want to do in PHP is to get your page printed, and only then you can retrieve it with an http request and parse it with, in your case, a library such as simpleHtmlDom.
Quick example on how to parse a rendered page with simpleHtmlDom:
Let's say you know that your page will be available at http://mypage.com/mypage.php
$html = file_get_html('http://mypage.com/mypage.php');
foreach($html->find('div.anything') as $element)
echo $element->src . '<br>';
you probably need a combination of those.
In your Javascript:
var content = document.getElementsByClassName("anything")[0].innerHTML();
document.getElementByID('formfield').value(content);
document.getElementByID('hiddenForm').submit();
In your HTML/PHP File:
<form id="hiddenForm" action="path/to/your/script">
<input type="hidden" name="formfield" value="" />
</form>
In the script you defined in the form action:
if(!empty($_POST)){
$content = $_POST['formfield'];
// DO something with the content;
}
Alternatively you could send the data via AJAX but I guess you are new to this stuff so you should start slowly :)
Cheers!
steve
You could use JS to take the .innerHTML from the elements you wan and store them in .value of some input fields of a form and then use a submit button to run the PHP form handling as normal. Use .readOnly to make the input fields uneditle.
I have a script which uses file_get_contents and I then decode the returned JSON...
$urlone = json_decode(file_get_contents("http://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/user_timeline.json?include_entities=true&include_rts=false&screen_name=".$screen_name."&count=".$tweet_count."&page=1"),true);
What I would like to achieve is a callback so I can have a nice loader and then animate contents in when complete. Is there a way to use JQuery to do an AJAX call if Javascript is enable and fallback to the default PHP if it is disabled?
PHP doesn't know if the user has JavaScript enabled when it handles the request from the user, at least not on the first request.
Normally you would assume the user has no javascript and enhance from there, but as you want to 'fallback' to PHP, you would need to render the JSON anyway regardless of whether the user had JavaScript functionality - so using JavaScript would now be a tad pointless as you (and the user) already have the data.
what you can do is:
Confirm js is enabled in a previous request. If enabled link to php file that depends on javascript enabled. if not, link to php file that directly shows output. You could do this with a combination of Meta redirect and Javascript.
Or call the php file with direct output in an iframe that is inside a <noscript> tag, belonging to a tag that does the jquery.
in the first option you would have file.php link to either fileWithJs.php or fileWithoutJs.php
in the second option you would have something like this:
<script>
// jquery here
</script>
<noscript><iframe src="data.php"></iframe></noscript>
I'm trying to replace a bit of javascript in my page via AJAX, but for some reason, AJAX wont replace it...
When I use:
alert(document.getElementById('treintracking').innerHTML);
I can clearly see the javascript from the script piece: (this is the opening line of the javascript piece)
<script type="text/javascript" id="treintracking">
For replacing the script I use this:
document.getElementById('treintracking').innerHTML = responseText;
So, why does AJAX not want to replace the javascript?
I've tested, and the php file used to generate the replacement javascript, works fine.
I also took into account that the to-be-replaced javascript already has tags around it, so I removed those in the php file.
But it still wont replace the content...
Also, if it put somefunction() in that javascript, will it then run, or do I have to do something special?
Note: the javascript script is generated in a php file.
SOLUTION:
I am now using this external solution, I don't have a clue how it works, but it works perfectly:
http://www.javascriptkit.com/javatutors/loadjavascriptcss2.shtml
[I took the loading script from the page source, as it wasnt in the article itself...]
Adding JavaScript via innerHTML does not get evaluated.
If you want to add new code, just set the source to a new external JavaScript file.
So instead of using an Ajax call, you just set the src
document.getElementById('treintracking').src = "new/path.php?a=b";
Another solution [that I would avoid at all costs] is eval().
You'll probably have to embed the new javascript inside a function, which may assign new contents to other functions, and then invoke the outer function. Won't be terribly pretty.
I'm trying to get the source code from this page, to get the code of the timetables, and then parse it.
But when I fetch it with file_get_contents, the div I'm looking for is empty. I searched in the code, and it looks like it's filled with jQuery when to body is loaded.
So my question is : how can I get the source code of the page after the jQuery is executed ?
Thanks.
Since jQuery is javascript, php's file_get_contents will not help because it does not execute javascript.
Either find out which ajax data they load and use them directly, or use a browser ;)
the information you want comes from this page http://www.cinesion.ch/cinesion/timetable.php through an AJAX request so file_get_contents will never get it unless you do the call directly to this page...
try this one
http://www.cinesion.ch/cinesion/timetable.php?date=%&movie=%&city=%&_JEXEC=1
I have a php script that is a bit of a mess and after a form entry, I need to get an address, and display it on a google map. The html and php is crammed into the same script so I essentially need to call the JavaScript as the PHP is happening. Is there a way to do this?
Thanks,
Alex
You can POST your from to a different frame (or iframe), so your page would not reload. The response of your PHP file which comes back to that frame can contain JavaScript code, which will be executed. Something like:
echo('<script type="text/javascript"> alert("Executed on client side"); </script>');
No, PHP executed by the server and returns the full response to the browser. JavaScript in the page is then executed by the client.
You can't call Javascript functions from PHP. You can set the Javascript to run when the page loads instead.
What you want is something like this:
<script type="text/javascript"></script>
var userAddress = "<?php echo $_POST['address']; ?>";
doSomethingWithAddress(userAddress);
</script>
If that code is on the page which you are POSTing the address to, it would take the address from the user, and write it into a javascript tag. The PHP will get executed first on the server, before building the HTML document. This new document has the variable available to the javascript.
I don't know how you would go about doing that, but this seems like a good place to start looking:
http://code.google.com/intl/en/