PHP - POST & GET
Recall from the PHP Forms Lesson where we used an HTML form and sent it to a PHP web page for processing. In that lesson we opted to use the the post method for submitting, but we could have also chosen the get method. This lesson will review both transferring methods.POST - Review
In our PHP Forms Lesson we used the post method. This is what the pertinent line of HTML code looked like:HTML Code Excerpt:
This HTML code specifies that the form data will be submitted to the "process.php" web page using the POST method. The way that PHP does this is to store all the "posted" values into an associative array called "$_POST". Be sure to take notice the names of the form data names, as they represent the keys in the "$_POST" associative array.Now that you know about associative arrays, the PHP code from "process.php" should make a litte more sense.
PHP Code Excerpt:
$quantity = $_POST['quantity']; $item = $_POST['item'];
PHP - GET
As we mentioned before, the alternative to the post method is get. If we were to change our HTML form to the get method, it would look like this:HTML Code Excerpt:
"?item=##&quantity=##"
The question mark "?" tells the browser that the following items are variables. Now that we changed the method of sending information on "order.html", we must change the "process.php" code to use the "$_GET" associative array.
PHP Code Excerpt:
$quantity = $_GET['quantity']; $item = $_GET['item'];
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