Yep, Definitely need help. I tried option 1, but for some reason the
variables are not being passed - and this is messy and not really one I want
to use. Option 3 sounds like the cleanest, but I am not 100% familiar with
sessions - I have used this on another page with a counter so the counter
doesn't get run up on every refresh, and I am sure this is similar, but I
would need some further help on how to pass the information from one page to
the next.

Any help is appreciated......

----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris McCluskey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Beauford.2002" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "PHP General"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, February 15, 2003 1:25 PM
Subject: RE: [PHP] Forms Question


> Hey there,
>
> Maintaining state in a web application is always a difficult thing..
fortunatly, you use PHP, which makes it a bit easier.  However, if you do
not want anything written to the server or to the user's drive you are out
of luck, simply because at very least you will need to have the user
download your HTML which will be written to the hard drive for caching.
There are a few ways of doing making this work:
>
> 1)  Store the form values from the previous form stored in hidden form
fields on each page of the form, such as the fields the user filled out on
form1 will be stored as hidden form fields on form2, the fields from form1
and form2 will be stored in hidden fields on form3, etc..  This is not the
cleanest way, but as far as crossplatforming goes, it's one of the best.
>
> 2)  Use a cookie to store the form fields.  YUCK!  Cookies have many good
applications, but they are usually disabled on the user's browser as they
have been miss used in the past.  of course, this goes against your rule of
keeping things from being written on the user's harddrive.
>
> 3)  Finally, you could use sessions.  The cleanest way i would think to
pass variables from one form to another is to create an object in PHP that
contains the fields in the form as variables.  Pass that object from form to
form, adding the information the application recieves from the user into the
object at each form submit.  That way, all you have to do is to pass the
sessionid from page to page.  How do you do that you ask?  2 ways:  1) you
could save it in a cookie (this is the default way of passing sessionids in
PHP), 2) OR you can use a really cool thing PHP does and turn URL-rewriting
on in the php.ini file.  This will automatically rewrite all the urls you
have on your page to append the ?SESSIONID=<id> at the end and include the
sessionid as a hidden form field on all your pages.  Cool, huh?  yeah.. PHP
kicks ass.  =)
>
> If you need more help on how to do this, don't hesitate to ask.
>
> good luck!
> -Chris
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Beauford.2002 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Sat 2/15/2003 10:02 AM
> To: PHP General
> Cc:
> Subject: [PHP] Forms Question
>
>
>
> Hi,
>
> Im trying to figure out the best way to do the following.  I need to have
a
> series of forms that when the user finishes the first part of the form he
is
> sent to another page where a second form is filled out, and then a third.
> Making the forms etc. is no problem, what I'm not sure of is how to keep
the
> data from all forms so it can be displayed at the end. I don't want to
have
> anything written to the users drive, or to the server - so this
information
> would have to be kept in memory. Would an array work in this situation?
>
> Any ideas are appreciated.
>
> TIA
>
>
>
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>
>
>
>



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