I want to display an image as a response to an ajax call using php.. Does anybody have the complete code for this?? Please help me out..
Thanks in advance..
Well I don't have the complete code to this, and if I did, I wouldn't give it to you.
You need to start off by creating an image using PHP's various image generation functions. To make it dynamic you could send it various parameters which are encoded in the url and can be fetched using the $_GET superglobal in php.
You would then set the src of an existing image placeholder element to the location of your dynamic image, then voila! Instant dynamic image.
You should use jQuery + JSON combination. You can convert php array into JSON format using json_encode.
index.php:
<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery-1.4.2.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="ajax.js"></script>
<a href='car.php' class='ajax'>Car Image</a>
<a href='bike.php' class='ajax'>Bike Image</a>
<div id="title">Title comes here</div>
<div id="image">Image comes here</div>
car.php:
<?php
$jsonArray['title'] = "Car";
$jsonArray['image'] = "<img src='images/car.jpeg'>";
echo json_encode($jsonArray);
?>
bike.php:
<?php
$jsonArray['title'] = "Bike";
$jsonArray['image'] = "<img src='images/bike.jpeg'>";
echo json_encode($jsonArray);
?>
ajax.js:
jQuery(document).ready(function(){
jQuery('.ajax').click(function(event) {
event.preventDefault();
jQuery.getJSON(this.href, function(snippets) {
for(var id in snippets) {
jQuery('#' + id).html(snippets[id]);
}
});
});
});
Related
So if i have a small layout stored in example.blade.php, How do i use it in jquery ?
I want to include certain elements such as textboxes when a particular radio button is checked otherwise not.
Example:
$("document").ready(function(){
if ($("#role").prop( "checked")) {
$("#content").html(#include('layouts.nav'));
}
else
{
$("#content").html('');
}
});
The above code does not work so please provide some solution.
You can not do that. #include() is Blade and will be interpreted by PHP while JS runs in the browser. The Blade directives are already interpreted by PHP when the code hits the browser
You can create a hidden div in your view and then use jquery to get it's html content, here is an example:
<div class="layouts-nav" style="display:none;">
#include('layouts.nav')
</div>
<script>
$("document").ready(function(){
if ($("#role").prop( "checked")) {
var layoutNav = $('#layouts-nav').html();
$("#content").html(layoutNav);
}
else
{
$("#content").html('');
}
});
<script>
I create acf fields to upload logo image.
I need to get all url logo and push them in a jQuery array like this :
var logos = ["http://www.mylogo.com/img1.jpg", "http://www.mylogo.com/img2.jpg", "http://www.mylogo.com/img3.jpg"];
My ACF field :
$wall_references = get_field('wall_references');
I wrote that :
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
var logos = new Array();
<?php foreach($wall_references as $wall_reference){ ?>
logos.push('<?php echo $wall_reference['ref_logo']['url']; ?>');
<?php } ?>
</script>
That's print something like this in my document :
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
var logos = new Array();
logos.push('http://www.mylogo.com/img1.jpg');
logos.push('http://www.mylogo.com/img2.jpg');
logos.push('http://www.mylogo.com/img3.jpg');
</script>
How to push each php URL in my array please ?
I don't want to print my array in the console log, but directly in my document like this :
var logos = ["http://www.mylogo.com/img1.jpg", "http://www.mylogo.com/img2.jpg", "http://www.mylogo.com/img3.jpg"];
I am seeing one small quote mistake here, Use double quotes around instead single quotes.
logos.push("<?php echo $wall_reference['ref_logo']['url']; ?>");
What exactly is the difficulty?
If you console.log the logos Array you have exactly what you're looking for!
<button type="button" id="okButton" onclick="funk()" value="okButton">Order now </button>
<script type="text/javascript">
function funk(){
alert("asdasd");
<?php echo "asdasda";?>
}
</script>
When the button is pressed I want to execute PHP code (at this point to echo asadasda)
You could use http://phpjs.org/ http://locutus.io/php/ it ports a bunch of PHP functionality to javascript, but if it's just echos, and the script is in a php file, you could do something like this:
alert("<?php echo "asdasda";?>");
don't worry about the shifty-looking use of double-quotes, PHP will render that before the browser sees it.
as for using ajax, the easiest way is to use a library, like jQuery. With that you can do:
$.ajax({
url: 'test.php',
success: function(data) {
$('.result').html(data);
}
});
and test.php would be:
<?php
echo 'asdasda';
?>
it would write the contents of test.php to whatever element has the result class.
Interaction of Javascript and PHP
We all grew up knowing that Javascript ran on the Client Side (ie the browser)
and PHP was a server side tool (ie the Server side). CLEARLY the two just cant interact.
But -- good news; it can be made to work and here's how.
The objective is to get some dynamic info (say server configuration items) from the server into the Javascript environment so it can be used when needed - - typically this implies DHTML modification to the presentation.
First, to clarify the DHTML usage I'll cite this DHTML example:
<script type="text/javascript">
function updateContent() {
var frameObj = document.getElementById("frameContent");
var y = (frameObj.contentWindow || frameObj.contentDocument);
if (y.document) y = y.document;
y.body.style.backgroundColor="red"; // demonstration of failure to alter the display
// create a default, simplistic alteration usinga fixed string.
var textMsg = 'Say good night Gracy';
y.write(textMsg);
y.body.style.backgroundColor="#00ee00"; // visual confirmation that the updateContent() was effective
}
</script>
Assuming we have an html file with the ID="frameContent" somewhere,
then we can alter the display with a simple < body onload="updateContent()" >
Golly gee; we don't need PHP to do that now do we! But that creates a structure for
applying PHP provided content.
We change the webpage in question into a PHTML type to allow the server side PHP access
to the content:
**foo.html becomes foo.phtml**
and we add to the top of that page. We also cause the php data to be loaded
into globals for later access - - like this:
<?php
global $msg1, $msg2, $textMsgPHP;
function getContent($filename) {
if ($theData = file_get_contents($filename, FALSE)) {
return "$theData";
} else {
echo "FAILED!";
}
}
function returnContent($filename) {
if ( $theData = getContent($filename) ) {
// this works ONLY if $theData is one linear line (ie remove all \n)
$textPHP = trim(preg_replace('/\r\n|\r|\n/', '', $theData));
return "$textPHP";
} else {
echo '<span class="ERR">Error opening source file :(\n</span>'; # $filename!\n";
}
}
// preload the dynamic contents now for use later in the javascript (somewhere)
$msg1 = returnContent('dummy_frame_data.txt');
$msg2 = returnContent('dummy_frame_data_0.txt');
$textMsgPHP = returnContent('dummy_frame_data_1.txt');
?>
Now our javascripts can get to the PHP globals like this:
// by accessig the globals
var textMsg = '< ? php global $textMsgPHP; echo "$textMsgPHP"; ? >';
In the javascript, replace
var textMsg = 'Say good night Gracy';
with:
// using php returnContent()
var textMsg = '< ? php $msgX = returnContent('dummy_div_data_3.txt'); echo "$msgX" ? >';
Summary:
the webpage to be modified MUST be a phtml or some php file
the first thing in that file MUST be the < ? php to get the dynamic data ?>
the php data MUST contain its own css styling (if content is in a frame)
the javascript to use the dynamic data must be in this same file
and we drop in/outof PHP as necessary to access the dynamic data
Notice:- use single quotes in the outer javascript and ONLY double quotes in the dynamic php data
To be resolved: calling updateContent() with a filename and
using it via onClick() instead of onLoad()
An example could be provided in the Sample_Dynamic_Frame.zip for your inspection, but didn't find a means to attach it
You can't run PHP with javascript. JavaScript is a client side technology (runs in the users browser) and PHP is a server side technology (run on the server).
If you want to do this you have to make an ajax request to a PHP script and have that return the results you are looking for.
Why do you want to do this?
If you just want to echo a message from PHP in a certain place on the page when the user clicks the button, you could do something like this:
<button type="button" id="okButton" onclick="funk()" value="okButton">Order now</button>
<div id="resultMsg"></div>
<script type="text/javascript">
function funk(){
alert("asdasd");
document.getElementById('resultMsg').innerHTML('<?php echo "asdasda";?>');
}
</script>
However, assuming your script needs to do some server-side processing such as adding the item to a cart, you may like to check out jQuery's http://api.jquery.com/load/ - use jQuery to load the path to the php script which does the processing. In your example you could do:
<button type="button" id="okButton" onclick="funk()" value="okButton">Order now</button>
<div id="resultMsg"></div>
<script type="text/javascript">
function funk(){
alert("asdasd");
$('#resultMsg').load('path/to/php/script/order_item.php');
}
</script>
This runs the php script and loads whatever message it returns into <div id="resultMsg">.
order_item.php would add the item to cart and just echo whatever message you would like displayed. To get the example working this will suffice as order_item.php:
<?php
// do adding to cart stuff here
echo 'Added to cart';
?>
For this to work you will need to include jQuery on your page, by adding this in your <head> tag:
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
Any server side stuff such as php declaration must get evaluated in the host file (file with a .php extension) inside the script tags such as below
<script type="text/javascript">
var1 = "<?php echo 'Hello';?>";
</script>
Then in the .js file, you can use the variable
alert(var1);
If you try to evaluate php declaration in the .js file, it will NOT work
put your php into a hidden div and than call it with javascript
php part
<div id="mybox" style="visibility:hidden;"> some php here </div>
javascript part
var myfield = document.getElementById("mybox");
myfield.visibility = 'visible';
now, you can do anything with myfield...
We can use php in JavaScript by creating a form element and put the action as a .php page.
Then we use JavaScript to submit that form.
EX:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<title>PHP Executed with JS</title>
</head>
<body>
<form action="phpCode.php" id="phpCode">.
</form> <!-- This is the form-->
<script>
function runPhp() {
var php =
document.getElementById("phpCode")
php.submit() //submit the form
}
</script>
</body>
The PHP file name would be phpCode.php.
In that file would be your PHP code.
May be this way:
<?php
if($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD']=="POST") {
echo 'asdasda';
}
?>
<form method="post">
<button type="submit" id="okButton">Order now</button>
</form>
If you do not want to include the jquery library you can simple do the following
a) ad an iframe, size 0px so it is not visible, href is blank
b) execute this within your js code function
window.frames['iframename'].location.replace('http://....your.php');
This will execute the php script and you can for example make a database update...
Use ajax to send request and echo the response
when successfully executed. Like this:
$.get("site.com/ajax", function(status,data){
alert(status);
});
This can be achieved with jquery library.
You could run PHP at the start of the Page and grap the results from inputs
<?php
c = a * b;
?>
<input type="hidden" name="c" value="<?php c ?>"/>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
<script>
let cValue = $('input[name="c"]').val();
alert(cValue);
</script>
I'm trying to figure out the least obtrusive and least computationally expensive way to store PHP objects coming from my MySQL database such that their data can be rendered by JavaScript on click by a user.
Currently, I'm storing the data as custom attributes on a button. But this generates a lot of code and I've heard is "slow". I'm wondering if I should JSON encode my PHP object, $items (see below), and how that JavaScript would then look. Note I'm using Codeigniter for the PHP so that's what up with the alternate foreach loop syntax.
Here's where I'm at so far with the HTML/PHP:
<img id="img"></img><a id="url"></a> <!--elements where data is rendered on click-->
<? foreach($items as $item):?>
<button data-id="<?=$item->id?>" data-url="<?=$item->url?>" data-img="<?=$item->img?>">click<?=$item->id?></button>
<?endforeach;?>
And here's my JS:
$(document.body).on('click', 'button', function(){
var $this=$(this), id=$this.data('id'), url=$this.data('url'), img=$this.data('img');
$('#img').attr('src', img);
$('#url').attr('href', url).html(url);
});
Most of my site's data is coming from PHP via MySQL and I've long been confused by the issue of when should I convert that data to a JavaScript array/JSON or not.
If you json_encode your $items array (assuming it only consists of data you will want in JS), you can assign this to a JS variable:
<script>var items = <?php echo json_encode($items); ?></script>
You can then remove the data-url and data-img attributes. Then, within your JS code:
var $this = $(this), id = $this.data('id'), url = items[id].url, img = items[id].img;
// the rest of your code
Edit: when you move the click handler in a separate file, you would get something like this:
function setup_click(items) {
var $img = $('#img'), $url = $('#url');
$('button').click(function(evt) {
var id = $(this).data('id'),
url = String(items[id].url),
img=String(items[id].img);
$url.attr('href', url).html(url);
$img.attr('src', img);
});
}
here's a JSfiddle showing off the javascript/JSON part: http://jsfiddle.net/fz5ZT/55/
To call this in one shot from your template:
<script src="[your ext script file path].js"></script>
<script>setup_click(<?php echo json_encode($items); ?>);</script>
Hope that helps :)
I have this jquery code in a foreach loop. Basicaly the variable $perf gets a new value with every loop. How can I use jquery to display the different $perf value with each loop? Is it possible?
foreach ($perfs as $perf):
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
var performerName = $(".transparency").data('title');
var divcontent = $(".transparency").html();
if ( divcontent == ' ' ){
$(".transparency").html(''+performerName+'');
}
});
</script>
<div class="transparency" data-title="<? echo $perf; ?>"> </div>
endforeach;
You should do it like this:
<?
foreach ($perfs as $perf):
?>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
var $perf = "<? echo $perf; ?>"; //Get from php
alert($perf); //Show it
//Here goes the rest of your script
var performerName = $(".transparency").data('title');
var divcontent = $(".transparency").html();
if ( divcontent == ' ' ){
$(".transparency").html(performerName);
}
});
</script>
<div class="transparency" data-title="<? echo $perf; ?>"> </div>
<?
endforeach;
?>
That's it. It works.
(I tried to modify your code at least as possible, cause I don't know if I can remove parts)
PS: There would be more 'elegant' solutions, do you want one? or this is enough?
Can you please describe what you are trying to do? I'm about 90% sure there is zero reason for any javascript, jQuery or otherwise.
Why not just do this?
<?php
foreach($perfs as $perf)
{
echo "<div class='transparency' data-title='$perf'>$perf</div>";
}
?>
Unless there is something more you are trying to do, you don't need javascript at all. And even if you do need javascript, take the function out of the loop and call it once each iteration. you dont need the exact same function defined multiple times.
I suggest you look into the relationship between server and client-side scripting. For starters - take a look at the HTML source generated by your PHP and see if thats anything close to what you want. Also, read up about ajax. It seems that you are trying to do combine PHP/javascript in such a way that it needs additional HTTP Requests (ajax calls)
It is impossible to have PHP and javascript interact directly without AJAX, and it is difficult to answer the question without more knowledge of what, exactly, you want to happen.
If you want a different transparacy div for each value of $perfs you can use:
<?php foreach ($perfs as $perf) { ?>
<div class="transparency" data-title="<?php echo $perf; ?>"> </div>
<?php } ?>
And they you can use the jquery .each() to iterate over the divs
$(".transparency").each( function() {
var performerName = $(this).data('title');
// do stuff //
});
If all you want is to pass the values in $perfs to you javascript function you can use
var perfs = <?php echo json_encode($perfs); ?>;
OK I think I see what you are trying to do now. You'll want something like this:
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
var perfs = <?php echo json_encode($perfs); ?>;
$.each( perfs, function( index, value ) {
$( ".transparency" ).append( value+'<br>' );
} );
} );
</script>
<div class="transparency"></div>
This will output each value of $perfs inside of the transparency div.
Using JQuery each and append.
You will never want to wrap an entire script in a foreach loop, as that will create a separate script for each element in the array. Using json_encode you will change the PHP array into a javascript object & you can do whatever you want to with it.
Remember javascript is only able to access elements written to the page using echo or something similar. Whatever you can see when you look at 'view page source' in your browser is all your script will be able to use.