Re: nesting JS in echo's



Seni Seven wrote:
Jerry Stuckle <jstucklex@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in comp.lang.php:

Seni Seven wrote:
Jerry Stuckle <jstucklex@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in comp.lang.php:

Request-1 wrote:
"Jerry Stuckle" <jstucklex@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:gf2t4m$inr$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Request-1 wrote:
hi folks,

html coder here, new and terrified * of php!!
aaaaaa!

i'm trying to bury a JS script to rotate a photo, in a page i
converted from html to php.
the conversion went well, it was to use a php session cookie to
stop the repeating of an embedded video file on a per session
basis; i amended the php code to display a still pic if the session
cookie value was nil.

worked fine.

thought I'd try integrating a tested and true JS image random
rotator script into the echo command, but the problem was the
syntax of the single quotes and double quotes needed in the
doc.write and variable sequences in the JS.

i tried escaping the double quotes (my echo used double quotes),
but to no avail.

here's the JS CODE i use in the tail end of my PHP. "picnumber" is
the variable holding the randomly assigned number that chooses the
picture.

any help much appreciated..


++++++++++++++++

{ echo "

<script language='JavaScript1.2'>
<!-- begin
document.write(\"'<img src='images/swap/'+ picnumber +
'.jpg'>\"); // end -->
</script>
"; }

++++++++++++++++++++++++++

thanks
You have an extra single quote before <img ...

Hi Jerry,

the single quote is actually necessary in JS when you're using document.write to add strings in series (is it called "concatenating"
or something?). so the <img src...> statement was broken down into 3
seperate stings to be re-joined - all within the double-quote nested
doc.write stmt. my mistake was to leave the image path in single
quotes; instead I tried "escaped double quotes" to complete the image
path, like so,

{ echo "<script language='JavaScript1.2'>\n";
echo "<!-- begin \n";
echo "document.write('<img src=\"images/swap/' + picnumber
+'.jpg\" width=\"320\" height=\"240\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Fitness Training Image\">');\n";
echo "// end -->\n";
echo "</script>"; }


but no avail. still no pic shows up.

anyway. i get really confused with all the nested stuff and
single-double quotes. i may try that "heredoc" thing that Thomas
suggested. I'll need a couple of beers first. Friday night on
Javascript? Bad!


BTW - you don't need quotes around numeric values like your width, height and border. Only non-numeric data.
Are you talking about generating strict (X)HTML? Quotes must be on all element attributes in that case, regardless of attribute value type.


1. There is no indication this is XHTML.
2. You shouldn't use XHTML for web pages - it's not well supported by some browser, not the least being IE 6 and 7.

Actually, many can and do use XHTML for web pages.

I looked at this page successfully using IE7. The web document was written by NONE OTHER THAN BY THE W3 Consortium itself, the standards-
setting (they use the term "recommendations" modestly instead of "standards") in strict XHTML. Go figure.


Sure, you CAN make pages which will cater to the different browsers idiosyncrasies, but why? Where is the need for xhtml?

There are various documents that can be googled that specify solutions wo using XHTML for broken browsers like Internet Explorer, such as using an XML stylesheet also to get around problems with showing XHTML in standards-violating, never-get-it-right HTTP clients like Internet Explorer. This is not rocket science.

HTML does NOT require quotes on numeric attributes.

Actually the HTML 4 recommendation does not assert in any way whatsoever that quotes can be omitted for attributes that have numeric values. It does allow for their omission, but recommends they always be used. There is no indication about whether this recommendation applies to the various levels of HTML: strict, transitional, frameset.

http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/intro/sgmltut.html#attributes


Which backs up my claim that HTML does NOT require quotes on numeric attributes.

Here is one individual's take on SCRUPULOUSLY quoting all attribute values in HTML, which MUST be quoted in every case in XHTML:

http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/qattr.html

He is or was a regular (long-time) and, I believe, respected contributer to the HTML usage newsgroups.

So? That's one person's opinion. Worth no more or less than anyone else's opinion.

Search enough and you can find an opinion you agree with anywhere on the internet.

--
==================
Remove the "x" from my email address
Jerry Stuckle
JDS Computer Training Corp.
jstucklex@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
==================
.



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