On 2011-07-30 23:33, Stormy wrote:
At 07:06 PM 7/30/2011 +0100, Mark Rousell wrote:
On 30/07/2011 18:43, Jeroen Geilman wrote:
>>> So, why does a simple file with phpinfo() work and an html page with an
>>> include "xyz.php" NOT render the page as desired in the browser????
>>> It just
>>> ignores the include.
>
> HTML does not have an "include" directive.
> Please don't confuse PHP with HTML.

As an aside and for the avoidance of doubt, whilst they are not strictly
part of HTML,

SSI are *text* in a format that can be interpreted by an HTML client.

Incorrect.
SSI stands for SERVER-Side Includes.
The client, if it ever received such content, would not know what to do with it.


Server Side Includes (which include a #include directive)
are commonly available to plain HTML on many servers.

If php "includes" as output from the server (SSI)

PHP is not SSI.

anything that cannot be parsed as HTML [or as HTML parsable script, js etc] by the client (browser) then it will not be "render[ed ...] as desired in the browser????" which was the question in this thread.

"Servers" can send anything, invalid text/html from a php script, whatever ... if the client browser cannot parse|interpret the content it is doomed to failure.

Best - Paul

Tired old sys-admin

I'm sorry to hear that.

--
J.


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