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2,784 Pointsheader("Location: contact.php?status=thanks"); If "status" is a variable why is there no preceding dollar sign?
I thought all variables in php began with $....
3 Answers
Christian Andersson
8,712 PointsIn php you do indeed always indicate variables with the $
-sign. This is quite unique to php. Variables in Java for example don't need any prefix like that.
The variables that you send over HTTP have nothing to do with php though, and it's important not to confuse that. HTTP and php are completely different things and entirely abstract from eachother. As you probably know, the former is a protocol for how HTML should be sent over the web, while the latter is a programming language.
If you want to read up on the HTTP methods GET and POST, you can do so here: http://www.w3schools.com/tags/ref_httpmethods.asp.
GET and POST are the 2 most popular methods, but there are others too, but you probably won't use them much unless you dive into RESTful applications, such as Laravel.
Good luck!
Kevin Korte
28,149 PointsYes agreed, in that case you're not setting a PHP variable, you setting a variable in an HTTP query string, which has a different set of rules and standards to go by.
PHP can read query string variables using the $_GET
variable that Randy showed you.
Mat Sanders
4,819 PointsBecause it will be in a URL, and in the a url a variable doesn't use the $ sign.
Everything, after the ? becomes a variable and values.