Hi Ryan, Thanks for the quick response. I think I will dig on some Apache related forums.
Thanks Sudheer On Nov 24, 11:02 am, Ryan Florence <[email protected]> wrote: > People can always see your javascript. This is a server/application > issue. > > If it's one or two files of a simple application you could do some url > rewriting in an .htaccess file, but otherwise application routing is a > pretty big discussion outside the scope of the mootools group. > > Ryan Florence > > [Introducing MooDocs - become a better developer] (http://blog.flobro.com/ > ) > > On Nov 24, 2009, at 11:56 AM, Sudheer wrote: > > > > > Hi, > > > I have a question regarding how to specify a URL for a JSON request. > > Here is my directory structure > > > htdocs > > | > > |----members > > | |---MyHome.php > > | |---fetchMyOrders.php > > | > > |----common > > > My current JSON request looks like as follows and it works fine. (I > > have provided only partial code here) > > var ajaxRequest = new Request.JSON({ > > url: "fetchMyOrders.php", > > method: 'get', > > async: false, > > . > > . > > > I can move the file fetchMyOrders.php to "common" directory and change > > the url part of the request to "../common/fetchMyOrders.php" and that > > works too. > > > Now the question is, is there a way by which I can provide this path > > in a more elegant way and not specify the whole "../common" part of > > the URL? Actually I will put a lot of PHP scripts in that "common" > > directory and I don't want anyone looking at my JS code to figure out > > the directory structure of the server. > > > Thanks > > Sudheer- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -
