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 Posted by Sonoman on 07/04/45 11:45 
"Rich" <rich@newsguy.com> wrote in message  
news:e236io0ku1@drn.newsguy.com... 
> On Tue, 18 Apr 2006 11:52:59 -0400, Sonoman wrote... 
>> 
>>Hi all: 
>>I have an approach problem and I would like to hear how would others  
>>handle 
>>this. I have a NAICS database which consists of all the business  
>>categories 
>>in the US, the respective code number and a text description. The number  
>>is 
>>a 6 digit number where the first two are the main categories, the third is  
>>a 
>>sub category and so on. I have this already broken down on the database. 
>> 
>>There are way too many records to have a user browse through the whole 
>>thing, so what I though was to have a series 5 of drop down menus where  
>>the 
>>first has the main two digit categories and the others are blank. As soon  
>>as 
>>you selects a category from the first drop down the corresponding sub 
>>categories will show on the second drop down and so on until the user  
>>builds 
>>the correct NAICS number based on the selections. 
>> 
>>My question is how to do this? I was thinking on storing the selected  
>>values 
>>on cookies so I can keep reloading the page with a button until I am done. 
>>But this approach seems way too cumbersome. 
>> 
>>Any ideas? 
>> 
>> 
> 
> From my understanding you would use the setcookie() function to create  
> one, and 
> use the $_COOKIE array to retrieve the information. If you have a  
> multi-step web 
> form, it may work out better going that route, so there's less redundant  
> queries 
> to the database. 
> 
> Rich 
> 
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> --  
> 
 
Thank you Rich, I was planning on doing that but I wanted to find out if  
there was a cleaner, more elegant way to do it. My way seems more like brute  
force. 
 
FC
 
  
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