I'm new to forms and post data ... so I don't know how solve this problem!
I've a php page (page1) with a simple form:
<form method="post" action="/page2.php">
<input type="search" value="E-Mail Address" size="30" name="email" />
<input type="submit" value="Find E-Mail" />
</form>
How you can notice ... this form post the 'email' value to the page2. In the page2 there is a small script that lookup in a database to check if the email address exist.
$email = $_POST['email'];
$resut = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM table WHERE email = $email");
.
.
.
/* do something */
.
.
.
if($result){
//post back yes
}
else{
//post back no
}
I don't know how make the post back in php! And how can I do to the post back data are read from a javascript method that shows an alert reporting the result of the search?
This is only an example of what I'm trying to do, because my page2 make some other actions before the post back.
When I click on the submit button, I'm trying to animate a spinning indicator ... this is the reason that I need to post back to a javascript method! Because the javascript function should stop the animation and pop up the alert with the result of the search!
Very thanks in advance!
I suggest you read up on AJAX.
Here's a PHP example on W3Schools that details an AJAX hit.
Hi i think you can handle it in two ways.
First one is to submit the form, save the data in your session, check the email, redirect
back to your form and display the results and data from session.
Like
session_start();
// store email in session to show it on form after validation
$_SESSION['email'] = $_POST['email'];
// put your result in your session
if ($results) {
$_SESSION['result'] = 'fine';
header(Location: 'yourform.php'); // redirect to your form
}
Now put some php code in your form:
<?php
session_start();
// check if result is fine, if yes do something..
if ($_SESSION['result'] == 'fine) {
echo 'Email is fine..';
} else {
echo 'Wrong Email..';
}
?>
More infos : Sessions & Forms
And in put the email value back in the form field
<input type="search"
value="<?php echo $_SESSION['email']; ?>"
size="30"
name="email" />
Please excuse my english, it is horrible i know ;)
And the other one the ajax thing some answers before mine !
As a sidenote, you definitly should escape your data before using it in an SQL request, to avoid SQL injection
As you are using mysql_* functions, this would be done with one of those :
mysql_escape_string
or mysql_real_escape_string
You would not be able to post in this situation as it is from the server to the client. For more information about POST have a look at this article.
To answer your question you would want to do something like this when you have done your query:
if(mysql_num_rows($result)){ //implies not 0
$data = mysql_fetch_array($result);
print_r($data);
}
else{
//no results found
echo "no results were found";
}
The print_r function is simply printing all the results that the query would have returned, you will probably want to format this using some html. $data is just an array which you can print a single element from like this:
echo $data['email'];
I hope this helps!
<?php
echo " alert('Record Inserted ');"
OR
echo " document.getElementByID('tagname').innerHtml=$result;"
?>
OR
include 'Your Html file name'
Related
I have a form, which redirects the user to "page1.php" after the form is submitted. What I want to do is to redirect the user to "page2.php" after the form is submitted, but I need to make sure that the POST request was sent. Example:
<form action="page1.php" method="POST">
<input type="text" name="username" />
<input type="text" name="age" />
<input type="submit" value="" />
</form>
When the user clicks on Submit, it redirects him to page1.php. I want to redirect him to page2.php, but I need to make sure that the data is sent to the server. I can't use AJAX. Is there any way to do it with cURL or something like that? Any examples?
Thanks!
I guess this works !!
In page1.php
<?php
//do establish session
//and check for the input fields obtained via $_POST
if(isset($_POST['name_of_your_field']) && !empty($_POST['name_of_your_field'])){
if(!mail($to,$subject,$message)){
header('location:form.php?msg=error');
}else{
header('location:page2.php?msg=succes');
}
}
?>
You can check if the POST request was sent with something like:
if($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'] == 'POST') {
// do something...
}
You can create a hidden input in your form and send additional info about the form that is submitted, e.g. action.
Inside you will do your magic and redirect user with:
header('Location: page2.php');
exit();
In your 'page1.php' processor, add a 'header' redirect to 'page2.php'.
header("Location: page2.php");
exit;
you could do a check if query is complete
example
<?php
$query=mysqli_query(".......your query statement")or trigger_error(mysqli_error());
if($query){
header("Location:page2.php");
}
else{
die('error');
}
?>
In your situation, you can just simple check for the posted data. Like
$username = $_POST['username'];
$age = $_POST['age'];
if($username&&$age){ /* This is to check if the variables are not empty */
// redirect to page2
}
It is logical that if those are not empty, meaning they are posted. Even if they are empty, as long as you get there, that means it was posted. There is no need to check if posted or not, what needs to be checked was, if posted data was there.
I hope I made it clear. ^_^ but making sure is not bad at all. Happy coding friend.
I have faced a problem in all of my php projects is that since i used OOP is that if there is a user submitting a form
when it goes to processing it and if it has an error i save a message in the session and redirect them to the same page
this is a sample and of course when it redirects it wipes all the fields that was there
like let's say i have a register form that had
<?php if(!empty($message)) { echo $message } ?>
<form action ="forms/register.php">
first name: <input type="text" name="first_name" />
username:<input type="text" name="username" />
<input type="submit" value = "submit" />
</form>
and this is what the code in forms/register.php
if(isset($_POST['submit'])) {
$first_name = $_POST['first_name'];
$username = $_POST['username'];
if(empty($first_name) || empty($username) {
$session -> message("please fill in all the fields");
redirect("../register.php");
} else {
// do something else like insert query
}
}
my problem is if first_name or user_name is empty and it redirects to register.php
and it echos the error message no problem in that
but the fields are empty the first_name and the user_name are empty
so the user has to fill it all again
so one of my friends suggested to save it in the session or something
so i would like to know if that is possible then how and what i mean by how so nobody would get it wrong, i mean the way not the code to just copy it and paste it
Thanks in advance
and sorry for being long and annoying
You can store whatever values you want to keep persisted in the form after the page redirects in session variables, then retrieve those values on the form page and echo them in the value attribute of the form elements.
session_start(); $_SESSION['nick'] = $_GET['nick'];
more / better examples:
http://php.net/manual/en/function.session-start.php
Not sure what issue you exactly are facing (also what $session is inside your workflow?).
However, i recommend using PHP inbuild session support.
http://php.net/manual/en/features.sessions.php
From the above link itself:
<?php
session_start();
if(isset($_SESSION['views']))
{
$_SESSION['views']=$_SESSION['views']+1;
}
else
{
$_SESSION['views']=1;
echo "Views=". $_SESSION['views'];
}
?>
Above code simply keeps track of page views. $_SESSION variable persists between page loads and you should be using the same for all your session requirements.
I'm trying to write my first PHP script (hopefully). I want to send user input from a form inside an HTML page to a PHP script and validate them inside script. then, if there is any problem with input data, return to first page and highlight wrong fields. else go to another page (something like successful).
How do i send feedback from second script to first page without using forms?
In short, you'd have something like this:
<?php
if ($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'] == 'POST') {
$errors = array();
$name = $_POST['name'];
if ($name !== 'Fred') {
$errors[] = 'Please enter "Fred"';
}
... validate more fields ...
if (count($errors) == 0) {
... form is ok ...
header('Location: everything_is_ok.php');
exit();
}
}
?>
<form action="<?php echo $_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME'] ?>" method="POST">
Enter 'Fred': <input type="text" name="name" value="<?php echo htmlspecialchars($name) ?>" /><br />
<input type="submit" />
</form>
Basically: Have the form page submit back to itself. If everything's ok, redirect the user to another page. Otherwise redisplay the form.
Just make your Form POST to itself, then in your PHP check the values and if they are valid, don't display your form and do your submit code. If they are invalid, display the form with the values and errors displaying.
Reload the first page and send the feedback in the session, for example. If session['errors'] exist, echo them. Note you'll have to include some php tags in your html page anyway.
Use a session... here's a link to help you get started: http://www.tizag.com/phpT/phpsessions.php
I am having problems figuring out how to retain users data when the validation fails. I am somewhat new to PHP so I might be making some huge mistakes in my logic.
Currently if the validation fails all the fields are wiped clean and $_Post data is also gone.
Here is some code assuming the user enters an invalid email I want the Name field to be retained. This code is not working.
<?php
if($_POST['doSubmit'] == 'Submit') {
$usr_name = $data['Name'];
$usr_email = $data['Email'];
if (isEmail($usr_email)==FALSE){
$err = "Email is invalid.");
header("Location: index.php?msg=$err");
exit();
}
//do whatever with data
}
if (isset($_GET['msg'])) {
$msg = mysql_real_escape_string($_GET['msg']);
echo "<div class=\"msg\">$msg</div><hr />";
}
if (isset ($_POST['Name'])){
$reusername = $_POST['Name'];}
else{$reusername = "NOTHING";}//to test
?>
<form action="index.php" method="post" >
<input name="UserName" type="text" size="30" value="<?echo $reusername;?>">
<input name="Email" type="text" size="30">
<input name="doSubmit" type="submit" value="submit">
</form>
}
You can use AJAX to submit your form data to your PHP script and have it return JSON data that specifies whether the validation was successful or not. That way, your fields won't be wiped clean.
Another way is to send back the recorded parameters to the posting page, and in the posting page, populate the fields using PHP.
However, I think the first solution is better.
UPDATE
The edit makes your code clearer and so I noticed something. Your input field is called UserName in the HTML, but you are referring to Name in PHP. That's probably why it's not working. Is your field always being filled with the value NOTHING? Make sure the name of the input field and the subscript you are using in $_POST are the same.
Also, there's no need to redirect to another page (using header) if you have an error. Maintain an $errors array or variable to print error messages in the same page. But like I mentioned before, it's probably better to use the JSON approach since then you can separate your view layer (the html) from the PHP (controller layer). So you'd put your HTML in one file, and your PHP in another file.
EDIT:
Vivin had commented that my assumption regarding the header was incorrect and he was right in that. Further more it looks like what the OP is doing is essentially what i layed out below albeit in a less structured fashion. Further Vivin - caught what is likely the actual problem here - the html name and the array key $_POST do not match.
Its wiped clean because you are using header to redirect to another page. Typicaly you would have a single page that validates the data and if ok does something with it and returns a success view of some sort, or that returns an error view directly showing the form again. By using header youre actually redirecting the browser to another page (ie. starting up an entirely new request).
For example:
// myform.php
if(strtolower($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD']) == 'get')
{
ob_start();
include('form.inc.php'); // we load the actual view - the html/php file
$content = ob_get_clean();
print $content; // we print the contents of the view to the browser
exit;
}
elseif(strtolower($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD']) == 'post')
{
$form = santize($_POST); // clean up the input... htmlentities, date format filters, etc..
if($data = is_valid($form))
{
process_data($data); // this would insert it in the db, or email it, etc..
}
else
{
$errors = get_errors(); // this would get our error messages associated with each form field indexed by the same key as $form
ob_start();
include('form.inc.php'); // we load the actual view - the html/php file
$content = ob_get_clean();
print $content; // we print the contents of the view to the browser
exit;
}
}
so this assumes that your form.inc.php always has the output of error messages coded into it - it just doesnt display them. So in this file you might see something like:
<fieldset>
<label for="item_1">
<?php echo isset($error['item_1']) ? $error['item_1'] : null; ?>
Item 1: <input id="item_1" value="<?php echo $form['item_1'] ?>" />
</label>
</fieldset>
Could do something similar to if failed then value=$_POST['value']
But vivin's answer is best. I don't know much about AJAX and wouldn't be able to manage that.
Ok, firstly header("Location: index.php?msg=$err"); is not really required. It's best practice not to redirect like this on error, but display errors on the same page. Also, redirecting like this means you lose all of the post data in the form so you can never print it back into the inputs.
What you need to do is this:
<input name="Email" type="text" size="30" value="<?php print (!$err && $usr_email ? htmlentities($usr_email, ENT_QUOTES) : '') ?>">
Here I'm checking whether any errors exist, then whether the $usr_email variable is set. If both these conditions are matched the post data is printed in the value attribute of the field.
The reason I'm using the function htmlentities() is because otherwise a user can inject malicious code into the page.
You appear to be processing the post on the same page as your form. This is an OK way to do things and it means you're nearly there. All you have to do is redirect if your validation is successful but not if it fails. Like this
<?php
if( isset( $_POST['number'] ) ) {
$number = $_POST['number'];
// validate
if( $number < 10 ) {
// process it and then;
header('Location: success_page.php');
} else {
$err = 'Your number is too big';
}
} else {
$number = '';
$err = '';
}
?>
<form method="POST">
Enter a number less than 10<br/>
<?php echo $err ?><br/>
<input name="number" value="<?php echo $number ?>"><br/>
<input type="submit">
</form>
how can I post back the data that are already in the text field?
example:
if I miss one of the required field an error will prompt when i click the submit button.
How can I make an post back data in that form using php or javascript and make the cursor of the mouse directly located to the field that caused an error?
There is no automated ways in PHP to write back the informations of the fields so you just have to echo it back.
Let's say you've got a "username" field ( <input type="text" name="username" /> ) you just need to add this:
value="<?php echo isset($_POST['username']) ? $_POST['username'] : ''; ?>"
or if you like more:
value="<?php if(isset($_POST['username'])) echo $_POST['username']; ?>"
changed "" to ''
This sounds like basic form validation. I would recommend reading some of these tutorials or looking for some pre-built PHP form validation mechanisms.
Form validation using PHP
PHP/CSS Form validation
PHP Form Validation
Some frameworks such as CodeIgniter will do this for you if you use their own libraries. It's worth checking out such a framework as they provide a lot of other benefits. Of course it's not always possible to transfer an existing application but it's still useful to bear in mind for the future.
If I understand this correctly you want to keep whatever data the user has already entered, tell him what he did wrong and preferably focus on the bad field.
If so then here's a very basic example using a form with two fields where both need to be filled in to proceed.
<?php
$field1=$_POST['field1'];
$field2=$_POST['field2'];
$badField="";
if($_POST['form_action']=="submitted") {
//Check incoming data
if(empty($field1)) {
$badField="field1";
echo 'field1 is empty<br>';
}
elseif(empty($field2)) {
$badField="field2";
echo 'field2 is empty<br>';
}
else { //Everything ok - move to next page
header('Location: <next page>');
}
}
echo '<form name="mybo" action="' . $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] . '" method="POST">
<input type="text" name="field1" value="' . $field1 . '"><br>
<input type="text" name="field2" value="' . $field2 . '"><br>
<input type="submit" name="Submit" value=" Enter ">
<input type="hidden" name="form_action" value="submitted">
</form>';
//Focus on empty field
if(!empty($badField)) {
echo '<SCRIPT language="JavaScript">
document.mybo.' . $badField . '.focus(); </SCRIPT>';
}
?>
I think the Moav's answer is "philosophically" correct however if you want do that you can:
1) pass via GET or POST the text control id;
2) on the server check that error condition;
3) fill an hidden input field with that value on the page returns
4) if error that with JS you can do:
window.onload = init; // init stuff here
function init()
{
checkForError();
}
function checkForError()
{
var h = document.getElementById("error_field");
var v = h.value;
if(v)
document.getElementById(v).focus();
}
However, if you will do that for every error field there will be a post and this is
by a user perspective very boring...so it is better to adopt other approaches...
I would take a different approach:
Validation should be in JS, and as such you never loose data, as you don't submit.
Any wrong data that was submitted and caught on the server is due to someone trying to pass over your JS validation, which means he has criminal thoughts, usually.