Reputation: 4944
When I click on a comment section for a given entry on a site I have, the URL looks like this:
I want to make it look like this URL:
http://www...com/.../comments/Portugal-Crushes-North-Korea-62
I understand that this involves adding rules to the .htaccess file. I have two questions:
Since I am using the GET method in PHP, the ugly URL has a bunch of variables appended to it. I don't want all of these variables to appear in the clean URL. Is it possible to only include a few of the variables in the clean URL but still have a rule directing it to an ugly URL with all of the variables?
Once I have the .htaccess rules written, do I go back and change the links in the source code to direct to the clean URLs? If so, how do I do this using the GET method when the clean URL does not have all of the variables that I want to pass along?
Thanks in advance,
John
Upvotes: 2
Views: 1682
Reputation: 2041
I join the word of Sjoerd, but there are a lot of ways how you can rewrite your url like you want to!
Apache and (IIS too) supports url-s like this one: http://example.com/index.php/my-rewritten-url_62
function URISegment($segment)
{
$uri_array = explode('/',$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);
$uri_count = count($uri_array);
$returning_uri = array();
for($i = 0;$i<$uri_count;$i++)
{
if(empty($uri_array[$i]) || $uri_array[$i] == "index.php")
unset($uri_array[$i]);
else
array_push($returning_uri,$uri_array[$i]);
}
if($segment < count($returning_uri))
return $returning_uri[$segment];
else
return false;
}
This works, but you need to define the base url too, and this needs to be called at the beginning of the file, and implemented at every image, script, etc. call.
function BaseURL()
{
if(isset($_SERVER['HTTP_HOST']))
{
$base = isset($_SERVER['HTTPS']) && strtolower($_SERVER['HTTPS']) == 'on' ? 'https' : 'http';
$base .= '://'. $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'];
$base .= str_replace(basename($_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']), '', $_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']);
}
else
{
$base = 'http://localhost/';
}
return $base;
}
After this you can use instead of this:
// http://example.com/?MyKey=Some-data
$MyKey = $_GET['MyKey']; //which is the first item
echo $MyKey;
// results: Some-data
This:
// http://example.com/?MyKey=Some-data
$MyKey = URISegment(0);
echo $MyKey;
// results: Some-data
You've got the same result by each one.
PS:
I like this solution because I can mix url types as I need them like:
example.com/index.php/index/evaled-article?some=db-stored&code=snipplet
And of course you can rewrite your url like FRKT said :)
And of course, if you want to hide the index.php
you need to use mod_rewrite, because there's no way
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 8785
I'm not sure why you need all that data in the URL. You should be storing things like the submission title, its date and author in a database and then refer to it with an ID. That way, your URLs will be shorter and prettier:
http://www.example.org/article.php?id=1
http://www.example.org/article/1/
You can accomplish this with a simple RewriteRule in your .htaccess
file, like so:
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule ^articles/([0-9]+)/ article.php?id=$1
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 75629
No, you can not leave variables out and expect them to be passed anyway. If you do this, the information is no longer in the URL, so you don't have a way to get it.
You can use post instead of get if you want to pass variables without them showing up in the URL.
Upvotes: 0