PHP - Something Global
This question may sound very lame... ... But I have never able to know how to define a variable that I can use in different functions in a same file. There is no class structure just a PHP file with some functions. Is it possible to use some type of variable that can be share by all functions and that variable should not be a session variable .
Something like: <?php $my_global_var; function A() { // use $my_global_var here } function B() { // use $my_global_var here and should retain the last value } ?> Something like in VB6.... Thanks Similar TutorialsI have some variables that I have set with the global command but they don't seem to be working correctly. It's probably my order of operation but not sure. Here's the stripped down version of whats going on: locator() //functions function geoip() global $zip, $city, $areacode, $metrocode, $state, $country, $latitude, $longitude; function locator() geoip() use globals from geoip pass to- ad_display() function ad_display() does some work stat_tracking() function stat_tracking() access global $zip, $city, $areacode, $metrocode, $state, $country, $latitude, $longitude; The problem is once I call stat_tracking() and try to access the global variables, they are all empty. Just to clarify the chain of events is: page loads, calls locator(), locator() calls function geoip() fine then passes work to ad_display(), ad_display() calls stat_tracking(), stat_tracking() now tries to access the globals I made but all variables are blank if I echo them. Any ideas? i have two classes and I am trying to call one class in through another here is my code but my welcome is not showing at all ever when i change the var's to 1 Code: [Select] class site { function DisplayContent ($page) { global $Users; echo '<div align="center"> <div id="Header"> <div id="NavBar">'; if ($Users->logged == 1) { echo 'Welcome '. $Users->user .' - <a href="?page=viewreminders">View Reminders</a> - <a href="?page=addreminder">Add Reminder</a> - <a href="logout.php" id="Logout">Logout</a>'; } else { echo '<a href="?page=login">Login</a> - <a href="?page=register">Register</a> - <a href="?page=forgotpassword">Forgot Password?</a>'; } echo '</div> </div> <div id="Content">'; $this->ShowPage($page); echo '</div> <div id="Footer">Copyright © '.date('Y').'<br /> Coded and Designed by Chris Cloyd</div> </div>'; } } class users { var $logged; var $user; var $email; var $level; function LogIn ($name,$email,$level) { $this->logged = 1; $this->user = $name; $this->email = $email; $this->level = $level; } function LogOut () { $this->logged = "0"; $this->user = ""; $this->email = ""; $this->level = ""; } } It's a function=> Code: [Select] function _wp_call_all_hook($args) { global $wp_filter; //var_dump($wp_filter); //exit(); reset( $wp_filter['all'] ); do { foreach( (array) current($wp_filter['all']) as $the_ ) if ( !is_null($the_['function']) ) call_user_func_array($the_['function'], $args); } while ( next($wp_filter['all']) !== false ); } Why is $wp_filter variable declared as global ? Was $wp_filter assigned before ? Just wanted to know if $_Session was a global thing or does php require cookies setup?
I assumed that I could do something like this:
PAGE: A.php session_start(); $_Session['Cat'] = 'Meow'; // ----------------------- PAGE: B.php if (isset($_Session['Cat']) && !empty($_Session['Cat'])){ echo $_Session['Cat']; } OUTPUT: Meow // ----------------------- PAGE: C.php if (isset($_Session['Cat']) && !empty($_Session['Cat'])){ echo $_Session['Cat']; } OUTPUT: MeowI can't seem to get this to work. Page: Handler.inc // ========================================================= Session Log in / out public function logon($username, $password){ if ($username == "admin" && $password == "coffee"){ session_start(); $_SESSION['USER_STATUS'] = '1'; echo 'IN SESSION LOGIN HANDLER'; echo $_SESSION['UserLogged']; } } public function logout(){ $_SESSION['USER_STATUS'] = '0'; echo 'IN SESSION LOGOUT HANDLER'; session_destroy(); //session_unset(); }Page: index.php if (!isset($_SESSION['USER_STATUS']) && empty($_SESSION['USER_STATUS']) || $_SESSION['USER_STATUS'] == 0){ if (isset($_POST['username']) && !empty($_POST['username']) && isset($_POST['password']) && !empty($_POST['password'])){ $username = $_POST['username']; $password = $_POST['password']; echo $handler->logon($username, $password); } <LOGIN FORM CODE> }else{ if (isset($_SESSION['USER_STATUS']) && !empty($_SESSION['USER_STATUS']) || $_SESSION['USER_STATUS'] == 1){ echo 'Session name: '. $_SESSION['USER_STATUS']; } if (isset($_POST['btn_logout']) && !empty($_POST['btn_logout'])){ $handler->logout(); echo '<br />Logged out<br />'; } <LOGOUT FORM BUTTON CODE> }Could someone point me in the right direction please. It does not seem to hold its session. hello, ok if i set a Global on index.php (wwwroot/admin/index.php) it works Code: [Select] $page1='hello from page1 on index'; global $page1; echo $page1; i can echo $page1 on other pages like (wwwroot/admin/pages/home.php) and it will echo out "hello from page1 on index". GREAT but if i write a Global on (wwwroot/admin/pages/home.php) it does not work. i also can not echo it out on any other page Code: [Select] $page2='hello from page2 on home'; global $page2; echo $page2; why is this ??? I use $db object to handle database function like $db->get_row for example. Is there any way that I don't need to put into every function global $db or do I actually need to repeat in every function global $db? Code: [Select] function example(){ global $db //Do I need to repeat this in each function? } I know there is a function for this, but for some reason my google-fu is off and I cannot remember it for the life of me. What is the function to export an array into the global namespace? Such that: $var=array('key'=>'val'); somefunc($var); echo $key; Would work? $errors=0; //NEW USER NAME HAS BEEN SUBMITTED, CHECK IT OUT AND THEN ADD IF OKAY $newuser=$_REQUEST['newuser']; function TryAgain(){ global $errors; $errors++; echo '<br/><br/>Please try again <a href="index.php?locate=admin&sub=add_admin">here</a>'; echo "<br/>errors=[$errors]"; } echo "<br/>Trying to add user: $newuser<br/><br/>"; if ($newuser){ }else{ // field was left blank, report this to user and give them option to try again echo '<br/>Field was left empty, you must pick a username.';TryAgain(); } if (strlen($newuser)<5){echo 'Username should be at least 5 characters.';TryAgain();} if (!$errors){echo "continue to SQL [errors=$errors]";} what is wrong with this code? For some reason if I increment $errors with $errors++ within the function it doesn't increment outside the function's scope. even though I declare it as a global at the start of the function. I know I'm doing something stupid here but can somebody please tell me what it is? Thanks This topic has been moved to CSS Help. http://www.phpfreaks.com/forums/index.php?topic=356577.0 I need the following three variables to be available globally, that is to every page. (An common header.html uses them at every page). Please teach me how to initialize them. (inside the header.html maybe?) 'U_M_CODE' => append_sid("{$phpbb_root_path}faq.$phpEx", 'mode=bbcode'), 'U_M_TERMS' => append_sid("{$phpbb_root_path}ucp.$phpEx", 'mode=terms'), 'U_M_PRV' => append_sid("{$phpbb_root_path}ucp.$phpEx", 'mode=privacy'), Thank you. <?php function getglobal() { global $my_global; echo "The value of \$foobar is '$foobar' <br />"; } $my_global = 20; getglobal(); ?> It's supposed to give the result, Quote 'The value of $my_global is '20'; But instead when I try it, its giving me Quote Notice: Undefined variable: foobar in C:\wamper\www\php\index.php on line 17 The value of $foobar is '' So I don't really understand what's happening and why it's not working. This topic has been moved to CSS Help. http://www.phpfreaks.com/forums/index.php?topic=356168.0 Hi there, I am a highly concerned about ever using global variables (as many guides I have seen on security issues with PHP say you should avoid them, kind of understand why though to be fair), but I was wanting to really understand custom based session handlers in PHP and this first one he http://uk.php.net/manual/en/function.session-set-save-handler.php on the example: 'Example #1 session_set_save_handler() example' uses them. Now would it be better to take the global variable in function: ''open()' and then return the variable $sess_save_path then pass it up to the next function that may need it perhaps? I just don't want to use globals if I can avoid it, been working out a system that work use for some old solution we use and it uses globals and it really bugs the living life out of me, why people are so lazy they can't avoid them at all costs grrr. Any advice generally speaking is of great appreciation, Jeremy. hello. I have some oop code that pulls information about a page out of a mysql db but i dont want to put the code on every page. Instead in want to put it in the a function and pass it back to each page. do i put it in a function in my functions.php file or can i put it into my includes/pages.php includes file ?? the code looks for the page name on the page and then pulls that pages info from the db. this code works on the page - home.php Code: [Select] <?PHP require_once("../includes/initialize.php"); $currentPages = Pages::find_all(); $pName = "adminHome"; $page_id = ""; $visible = ""; $pageZones = ""; $pageCRUD = ""; $pageTypes = ""; $module = ""; $title = ""; $sub_title = ""; $description = ""; $image = ""; $about = ""; foreach($currentPages as $currentPage){ $page_id = $currentPage->id; $pageName = $currentPage->pageName; $visible = $currentPage->visible; $pageZone = $currentPage->pageZones_id; $pageCRUD = $currentPage->pageCRUD_id; $pageType = $currentPage->pageTypes_id; $module = $currentPage->module_id; $title = $currentPage->title; $sub_title = $currentPage->sub_title; $description = $currentPage->description; $image = $currentPage->image; $about = $currentPage->about; if($pageName == $pName){ echo $pageName.'<br/>'; echo $page_id.'<br/>'; echo $visible.'<br/>'; echo $pageZone.'<br/>'; echo $pageCRUD.'<br/>'; echo $pageType.'<br/>'; echo $module.'<br/>'; echo $title.'<br/>'; echo $sub_title.'<br/>'; echo $description.'<br/>'; echo $image.'<br/>'; echo $about.'<br/>'; } } ?> i would like to be able to just put global $page or something like that to get all the db info for each page. i tried this in my includes/pages.php includes file but it cant get the page name. Code: [Select] public static function find_by_pageName(){ global $database; global $pName; $sql = "SELECT * FROM ".self::$table_name." WHERE pageName=".$pName.""; $result_array = self::find_by_sql($sql); return !empty($result_array) ? array_shift($result_array) : false; } any suggestions ???? whats the best way to do this ? thanks ricky ok iv set up a simple demo this is the code im running include('simple_html_dom.php'); include('config.php'); include('connect.php'); include('functions.php'); include($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR . 'globalFunctions.php'); test(); echo "test variable = ".$test; exit; this is the function which is in globalFunctions.php which is two directories back ../../ function test() { $test = 10; global $test; } how come when i run script i am not getting variable echoed Sorry, this will be a simple question. Say you define two global variables in your functions.php file as: GLOBAL $salesTax = .07; GLOBAL $shipping = 5.00; Those variables would be accessiible in the checkout.php page, right? If I want to load some user information from the database into an object/array and share it throughout my application, what's the best approach for this? Here is what I thought of doing: - I can call a function (e.g user_info() ) that will return the user information whenever I need it , but It'll have to run a DB query each time I call it. - Load user information once from the DB, assign it into a global array/object, then call that object whenever I need it. A lot of people recommended against using global variables, but I think performance wise it's better than running a query each time. Are there any better alternatives than the above approaches? Hiya! I was wondering if this is possible. Here is my example. This is a example class; <?php class a { public function __construct() { } public function returnValue() { include 'files/lang.php'; $this->lang = new lang(); return $this->lang->displayLang('10'); } } ?> This is the second class file; <?php class b { public function __construct() { } public function returnValue() { include 'files/lang.php'; $this->lang = new lang(); return $this->lang->displayLang('10'); } } ?> This is the main file; <?php include 'test/a.php'; $test = new a(); $test->returnValue(); include 'test/a.php'; $test2 = new b(); $test2->returnValue(); ?> With this I'm getting an error stating I cannot redeclare the function lang. I have found a way around this by using require_once but I was wondering if remove the include and $this->lang var from class 2 and I put this as the $this->lang var declaration in class 1; global $this->lang = new lang(); will class 1 and class 2 be able to use it from only the one declaration made in class 1. If so, would this be the way to do it or is there a better/working way to do it? Many many thanks, James. |