The PHP $_GET and $_POST variables
are used to retrieve information from forms, like user input.
The most important thing to notice
when dealing with HTML forms and PHP is that any form element in an HTML page
will automatically be available to your PHP scripts.
Form example:
<html> <body> <form action="welcome.php" method="post"> Name: <input type="text" name="name" /> Age: <input type="text" name="age" /> <input type="submit" /> </form> </body> </html> |
The example HTML page above
contains two input fields and a submit button. When the user fills in this form
and click on the submit button, the form data is sent to the
"welcome.php" file.
The "welcome.php" file
looks like this:
<html> <body> Welcome <?php echo $_POST["name"]; ?>.<br /> You are <?php echo $_POST["age"]; ?> years old. </body> </html> |
A sample output of the above
script may be:
Welcome John. You are 28 years old. |
The PHP $_GET and $_POST variables
will be explained in the next chapters.
User input should be validated
whenever possible. Client side validation is faster, and will reduce server
load.
However, any site that gets enough
traffic to worry about server resources, may also need to worry about site
security. You should always use server side validation if the form accesses a
database.
A good way to validate a form on
the server is to post the form to itself, instead of jumping to a different
page. The user will then get the error messages on the same page as the form.
This makes it easier to discover the error.