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Posted by Matthew Weier O'Phinney on 04/12/05 19:41
* Chris W. Parker <cparker@swatgear.com>:
> Ospinto <mailto:ospinto@hotmail.com>
> on Tuesday, April 12, 2005 10:32 AM said:
>
>> I used mod_rewrite to change http://www.mysite.com/page/1 to
>> http://www.mysite.com/page.php?id=1 to enable a search friendly url.
>
> Ok I'm with you.
>
>> Everything works fine, except that when I try to get the URL variable
>> ($id) by using $_GET, it doesn't return anything. With
>> http://www.mysite.com/page.php?id=1 it gets $id just fine.
>
> Now you've lost me. Those two statements seem to be in opposition to one
> another. You can't get $id with $_GET but
> http://www.mysite.com/page.php?id=1 works just fine? The URL is a "GET"
> URL since it has a querystring.
When using mod_rewrite, if the rewrite rule does not include a
pass-through, then the query string is not passed on to the script in
question. So, if you request the page directly with:
http://www.mysite.com/page.php?id=1
it will process correctly, but if you have a rewrite rule that doesn't
have the pass-through flag, then when the URL is _rewritten_ to the above,
the page is requested _without_ the query string -- even though the rule
rewrites the URL with a query string.
A rule that would (probably) work would look something like this:
RewriteRule page/(.*) /page.php?id=$1 [L,PT]
--
Matthew Weier O'Phinney | WEBSITES:
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