|  | Posted by Rik Wasmus on 11/21/07 17:11 
On Wed, 21 Nov 2007 17:26:29 +0100, <paul814@excite.com> wrote:
 > On Nov 20, 7:21 pm, "Rik Wasmus" <luiheidsgoe...@hotmail.com> wrote:
 >> On Tue, 20 Nov 2007 22:32:45 +0100, <paul...@excite.com> wrote:
 >> > OK well the page write-editorial.php opens now but it opens if radi=
 o
 >> > selected =3D 0 or 1.  it should only do it if =3D=3D 0.  Am I missi=
 ng
 >> > something?
 >>
 >> > <?PHP
 >> > if($selected_radio =3D=3D 0){
 >> >         header('Location:
 >> >http://localhost/production/write-editorial.php');
 >> >         exit;
 >> > }
 >> > ?>
 >>
 >> > do I first have to tell it what radio button is called, ex:
 >> > radReadWrite ?
 >>
 >> Well, how do you get this magic '$selected_radio' variable? (Hint:
 >> register_globals is probably off, so $selected_radio is not set. Loos=
 e
 >> comparison of 0 against NULL equals true)
 >
 > OK I see what I was doing wrong again, I was not assigning a value to
 > the variable first.
 > ........
 > Right now I have a simple IF to take me to a page based on selected
 > radio button:
 >
 > Code:
 >     <?PHP
 >     $selected_radio =3D $_POST['radReadWrite'];
 >     if($selected_radio =3D=3D 0){
 >             header('Location:  =
 
 > http://localhost/production/write-editorial.php');
 >             exit;
 >     }
 >     ?>
 >
 > How would I make this multi-dimensional, meaning I also have a option
 > group pull down, like a pull down you would see on the web for
 > selecting your State.
 >
 > I want to do something like this:
 > If $selected_radio =3D=3D0 and lstdepartment =3D=3D lsteditorial then =
 goto
 > page write-editorial.php
 
 if($selected_radio =3D=3D 0 && $lstdepartment=3D=3D'lsteditorial'){
 header(......../write-editorial.php);
 exit;
 }
 > or if $selected_radio =3D=3D0 and lstdepartment =3D=3D lstpress then g=
 oto page
 > write-press.php
 
 if($selected_radio =3D=3D 0 && $lstdepartment=3D=3D'lstpress'){
 header(......../write-press.php);
 exit;
 }
 
 > something like that?
 > How do I get the value of my lstbox? like I did for radio...
 > $selected_radio =3D $_POST['radReadWrite'];
 
 Indeed, just use the right name from your form ($_POST['lstdepartment'])=
 
 -- =
 
 Rik Wasmus
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