|  | Posted by Christina on 07/13/06 04:19 
Hi,
 Yes, I already understood the part of it initially being put into a temp
 directory, what I don't understand is that every tutorial I see has the
 move_uploaded_file($_FILES['uploadedfile']['tmp_name'], $target_path) inside
 an if statement.  "if
 (move_uploaded_file($_FILES['uploadedfile']['tmp_name']$target_path) )"
 rather than as a command or call to a function.  Therefore it seems to me it
 is just check if the file was moved, and if so, you do something within the
 if statement.  So, do you need to state:
 "move_uploaded_file($_FILES['uploadedfile']['tmp_name']$target_path);",
 then do the if statement:  "if
 (move_uploaded_file($_FILES['uploadedfile']['tmp_name']$target_path) )"?
 
 Chris
 
 "Flamer" <die.spam@hotmail.com> wrote in message
 news:1152745768.330657.317910@b28g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
 >
 > Chris wrote:
 >
 > > I'm not fully understanding the move_uploaded_file function.  PHP.net is
 > > either vague about usage (unclear examples) or overly technical in their
 > > language (as though whoever is looking for info has already been
 programming
 > > for 10 years).  Hence, I usually just get more confused after reading
 their
 > > 'explanations'.  The point is that in most cases from tutorials, books,
 etc.
 > > move_uploaded_file is supposed to move the file to a new location from
 the
 > > temp_dir.  Tutorials seem to focus on people only uploading image files
 and
 > > leaving them in an arbitrary folders where all uploads reside.  I need
 to
 > > move the files from the root temp directory to as many as 3 subfolder
 levels
 > > (Home/category or Home/group/project/category) depending on the
 selections
 > > the user makes.  However, it is defined as a boolean and it appears only
 to
 > > be used in an 'if' statement: i.e:
 > >
 > [snip]
 >
 > Hi,
 >
 > when its uploaded its saved to a temp dir with a temp name, thats how
 > you need to access it to move it
 > move_uploaded_file($_FILES['uploadedfile']['tmp_name'], $target_path
 > ect..
 >
 > Flamer.
 >
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