You must have a space between <? And your code EX: <? Blah blah ?> you
can also write <?php blah blah ?> which might be easier to follow. And
you have to include ALL your php code between these tags (you may use as
many pairs as you wish in your page). And don't forget to name you file
.php not .htm or .html

- Vic


-----Original Message-----
From: Alexander Ross [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, August 12, 2002 9:50 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PHP] Re: including a php file in an html doc

I still seem to be missing something.  I guess the easiest thing for me
to
do is just show you my code.  All I want is to be able to reference the
$hotspots array from any .html page oon my site.  I thought I could
include
hotspot.php and then reference the array using <?= ?> syntax.  What
should I
do?  The one requirement is that I cannot make all my pages PHP. They
must
be html.

HTML PAGE (test.html):
<html>
<head>
<title>Untitled Document</title>
<? include("hotspot.php"); ?>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
</head>

<body>
<?=$hotspots['kitten']?>
</body>
</html>

PHP PAGE (hotspot.php):
<?
include_once("../board/db_fns.php");

echo "hotspot = ".$hotspots;

if (!isset $hotspots){
  $connect = connect_to_db();
  $query = "SELECT * FROM hotspots";
  $result = mysql_query($query);
  $count = mysql_numrows($result);

  $hotspots = array();
  for($i=0;$i<$count;$i++)
  {
    $hotspot = mysql_fetch_assoc($result);
 $hotspots[$hotspot['hotspot']]=$hotspot['val'];
  }
  print_r($hotspots);
}
?>


"Bogdan Stancescu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi Alexander!
>
> You're missing the distinction between a server-side script (PHP) and
a
> client-side script (JavaScript, VB etc). When you use the syntax you
> used, the browser attempts to download the src and execute it - and it
> can't do that, because in the best case the php code runs on the
server
> and returns "test" (your echo()) and then it "tries" to run that as
php
> code, which again it doesn't know how. It does work for JavaScript
> however, because it downloads the JavaScript file (which is plain
text)
> and then executes the code (because it knows how to execute
JavaScript).
>
> What you should do would be write
> <? include("hotspot.php"); ?>
> instead of "<script language... etc".
>
> Bogdan
>
> Alexander Ross wrote:
> > I have a .php file whose purpose, ultimately, is to set one
variable;
> > $hotspot.  Now I want to include that var in a bunch of places in my
html
> > page (it must remain html).  So this was my thought.  In the <head>
include
> > the following:
> >
> > <script language="php" src="hotspot.php"></script>
> >
> > and then anywhere in the html doc I want to print the value of
$hotspot
I
> > type:
> >
> > <?=$hotspot?>
> >
> > but it doesn't work.  I have a feeling I cant include a php script
that
way
> > because in trying to debug the problem I made the first line of
hotspot.php
> > = echo "test"; and the word test never shows.  What am I missing?
> >
> > Thnks
> > Alex
> >
> >
> >
> >
>



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