On 31/07/11 10:14, Jeroen Geilman wrote:
On 2011-07-31 00:54, Rob Stone wrote:
Sorry I have created such a discussion around my use of the word
"include". In future I'll try to be semantically correct.
By "include" I mean lines of code like this that are embedded into the
source html.
<?php include "xyz.php"; ?>
And that's exactly the point - it's not "including" anything in the HTML
file.
It parses and executes the PHP code embedded in the HTML file, and that
PHP code contains a command that includes *other* PHP code.
Nowhere does anything get included in an HTML file.
All of these files echo something back so if a user did a Ctl+U they
would not see that "line" but html tags and data.
Some of my php files read a database and echo back something, even if
it is only "no records found".
But when I access my application via localhost and do a Ctl+U, I see
those lines and not html tags and data.
If apache2 can process a file containing <?php phpinfo(); ?> and
display the contents of php.ini with colourful markup, is it using the
php5 "engine" or doing it all by itself??
Apache does not process these embedded commands; that is all done by PHP.
Thanks to Richard this has now been SOLVED.
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