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 Posted by Sanders Kaufman on 01/17/07 03:45 
murrayatuptowngallery@yahoo.com wrote: 
 
> What I would like to do is have the web page visitor access one page 
> that 'calls' another so that the code isn't visible thru a web 
> browser's 'View Source'. 
 
That's like trying to run a car on gasoline that's not really in  
the tank. 
No can do. 
 
There are two ways to come close, though. 
 
The second-best way is to obfuscate the HTML.  Make it so ugly  
and garbled that noone can reverse-engineer it. 
 
The other is to have like a Javascript routine that dynamically  
loads content.  When they view source, they'll just see the JS  
routine.  The downside is that they can just look at what the JS  
downloaded - but at least it won't be as simple as just view-source. 
 
You can up the obfuscation on that by having the JS appear to  
load several different files, making it difficult for the  
cracker to know which file was displayed. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
> Can a .php or .htm file in the 'public', 'www', or 'html' directory 
> access a .php file in for example the CGI-BIN area, or is there another 
> way to do this? 
>  
> A visual example would probably help me more than a description.
 
  
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