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Re: Use of Includes [message #170953 is a reply to message #170947] Sat, 11 December 2010 16:35 Go to previous message
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Messages: 192
Registered: September 2010
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On 12/11/2010 7:58 AM, sheldonlg wrote:
> On 12/11/2010 7:42 AM, sheldonlg wrote:
>> On 12/7/2010 9:55 AM, Bill Braun wrote:
>>> New to PHP.
>>>
>>> Have searched for answer without finding anything that seems to address
>>> it, save perhaps for situations where the script writes HTML markup
>>> before the header is called.
>>>
>>> When would it be preferable/required to chain scripts one to the next
>>> rather than use includes? (The question could be reversed, also.)
>>>
>>> Chaining:
>>>
>>> [php] // script1.php
>>> code;
>>> header("location: script2.php");
>>> [endphp]
>>>
>>> [php] // script2.php
>>> code;
>>> header("location: script3.php");
>>> [endphp]
>>>
>>> [php] // script3.php
>>> code;
>>> [endphp]
>>>
>>> Include:
>>>
>>> [php]
>>> // scriptname: script1.php
>>> code;
>>> include 'script2.php';
>>> include 'script3.php';
>>> [endphp]
>>>
>>>
>>> Bill B
>>
>> I'm not sure I fully understand your question, but I'll try. First,
>> though, php is server side and provides html code that is presented to
>> the browser. So, whether you write all the code in one file, or use
>> includes/requires thus breaking it into two or more files, makes no
>> difference as far as the browser is concerned. It sees the same thing,
>> the whole page, either way.
>>
>> I would chain scripts if there is a logical division of the actions. For
>> example, suppose it is a networking kind of thing and one page would be
>> user information for registration. This would then shift to another page
>> for upload of pictures after successful registration. Those are two
>> separate actions which are related to each other and putting them on the
>> same page would be cluttering. (This was a poor example because I would
>> just have a button with a link to a page to upload pictures after
>> registering and winding up on a landing page -- but it illustrates my
>> point).
>>
>> I hope I understood your question correctly enough to be of some help.
>>
>
> Here is a better example. There was an application questionnaire that
> had the user's basic information and then ten separate areas of
> question. Each of the ten areas data was held in a separate database
> table which was linked to the user in the table of users. The first
> screen gathered the basic user information (name, address, etc.) and the
> submit put the data into the user table along with a page count. It then
> presented the next page which was the next area of the questionnaire.
> Those data were then put into its db table, the page count was updated,
> and the landing page was the next area of the questionnaire -- and so
> on. (The page count was so that a user could stop and return later to
> where he left off). This is a good example of chaining.
>

Thank you, Shelly, very helpful.

Bill B
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