ah yes, i can check the passed id if it's stored in a session, and
i'll check out the security component.
it's better to use what's already there supplied by Cake than to solve
problems with our own way right?
thank you for your replies.
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You
Well, in this case if you want you can store your ID in a session, but form
is fine also, it's how we used to do it ;)
Faifas
On Mon, Sep 7, 2009 at 07:47, Jamie wrote:
>
> Well, are you just new to CakePHP, or PHP in general? Because remember
> that CakePHP is really just PHP. And just like wi
Well, are you just new to CakePHP, or PHP in general? Because remember
that CakePHP is really just PHP. And just like with any PHP-driven
webpage that uses database tables with unique IDs, you need to pass
the ID in the form somehow. You just need to do some security/sanity
checks when processing
ID must be passed. It can be done through form hidden field or through
URL. Choose your way. For security check passed id in controller.
On Sep 6, 8:32 pm, thesti wrote:
> hi,
>
> i'm learning CakePHP and i take the Blog tutorial.
>
> and as i came to the modifying a post part, it's written that
hi
baked views should not be used as final solution for an application.
but you can use the security component to avoid manipulation of form data.
regards
On Sun, Sep 6, 2009 at 3:32 PM, thesti wrote:
>
> hi,
>
> i'm learning CakePHP and i take the Blog tutorial.
>
> and as i came to the mod
hi,
i'm learning CakePHP and i take the Blog tutorial.
and as i came to the modifying a post part, it's written that if we
supply the 'id' field to the FormHelper then the form will be used to
edit a post.
when i see the source page, i see that the id is there as a hidden
Input in the edit form