Re: Embedding HTML Within a PHP Statement [message #176013 is a reply to message #176012] |
Wed, 16 November 2011 10:10 |
Tim Streater
Messages: 328 Registered: September 2010
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Senior Member |
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In article <j9ur9a$hcq$1(at)dont-email(dot)me>,
Gregor Kofler <usenet(at)gregorkofler(dot)com> wrote:
> Am 2011-11-16 00:02, Tim Streater meinte:
>> In article <j9uqlb$daj$1(at)dont-email(dot)me>,
>> Gregor Kofler <usenet(at)gregorkofler(dot)com> wrote:
>>
>>> Am 2011-11-14 15:39, Tim Streater meinte:
>>
>>>> 4) Browser-back button to take you to page previous to checkout - with
>>>> the option to go forward still with no data lost.
>>>
>>> I *hate* such "solutions" (there are some of those out there in the
>>> wild). What happens when I click the real back button (or rather apply
>>> the respective mouse gesture)? Right, I end up at the very beginning of
>>> the purchase process and redo (or at least re-check) all my previous
>>> inputs.
>>
>> I don't trust any browser back button under those circumstances anyway.
>> You click the browser back button a couple of times and expect all your
>> data to still be there if you go forward again? I don't.
>
> That's not a problem of the browser back button, but of a sloppily
> written web application.
Indeed, strickly speaking. But I take the view that if someone has
bothered to put their own navigation buttons in, there is a much greater
likelihood that they'll have thought about my data and ensuring it's
still there if i move back and forth a few times.
--
Tim
"That excessive bail ought not to be required, nor excessive fines imposed,
nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted" -- Bill of Rights 1689
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