Is there ever a way or some tricks to post an array of data or a single variable string data using redirect() function in codeiginter?
when using redirect you go from one controller or another by this process all post data are destroyed unless you stored them on a session, here is how i do it
$data = array('firstname'=>'fname','lastname'=>'lastname');
// i store data to flashdata
$this->session->set_flashdata('lolwut',$data);
// after storing i redirect it to the controller
redirect('controller/method')
so on your redirected controller you can access it via $this->session->flashdata('lolwut')
note that i am using flashdata not userdata, flashdata destroys itself on the next process.
read more flashdata here SESSION CLASS
In the first place why you need post data while redirect :
you can have post function that handle all your code and then redirect after success or failure depends on your usage
function method()
{
//do something
redirect('path/to/method');
}
if you want to have variables passed through other pages you can do this by :
Save data into session, $this->session->set_data($data); or $this->set_flashdata($data); depends on your usage
Pass in URL as parameter instead of form submission
hope that helped you someway
Related
I am new in Codeigniter and it's one of the good frameworks of php. But on some conditions I'm confused. Like this one. If any of you have any clarification about my dough, it's a great help for me.
Offcouse redirects refresh the page and $this not but apart from this I want to know - anyhow both of them used to go to somewhere else on view pages or like in other controller or in same controller to other methods.
But we don't use these side by side because when getting any of them it will go to that page or method without checking the next lines.
In case of a normal difference then have lot's of but I just want to know about the condition of going to next page or method when we use redirect or $this like this -
$this->Function($value); //It's method of same controller.
redirect('Controller/function'); //It's also doing same with page reload.
Thank for looking my problem.
Redirect()
When you will call any function of helper in codeigniter then you can call function directly without using any object. Helper in Codeigniter is collection of functions.
Redirect() method is a part of URL helper in Codeigniter.
For your ref. https://www.codeigniter.com/user_guide/helpers/url_helper.html
So, just load helper using $this->load->helper('url'); or you can also mention in autoload.php file.
$this->Function(); used to call a function from same controller
$this->Function(); used to call a function from same controller
redirect()
While building a web application, we often need to redirect the user from one page to another page. CodeIgniter makes this job easy for us. The redirect() function is used for this purpose.
redirect($uri = '', $method = 'auto', $code = NULL)
The first argument can have two types of URI. We can pass full site URL or URI segments to the controller you want to direct.
The second optional parameter can have any of the three values from auto, location or refresh. The default is auto.
The third optional parameter is only available with location redirects and it allows you to send specific HTTP response code.
Redirect means jumping to another function mentioned in the redirect method.
$this->Function($value); => jumping to another function and you can execute the code of the same function as well as pass the value back by returning value.
When you send request to codeigniter generally CI controller gets called and then function which is mentioned in uri segment. like below... So this will be another request.
redirect('Controller/function'); //It's also doing same with page reload.
But when you have to call another function within the same request then you can use below approach
$this->Function($value); //It's method of same controller.
This will execute the given function and return the value within same request.
Normally google is my best friend but this problem I can't figure out or even understand.
I have an action in my controller that I use for selecting which follow up action in my controller to use, based on user input (see image)
This redirect work like a charm, it's when the action I'm redirected to is finished as the problem arises. In my action I fetch some much needed data for the web site. When tha data is fetched the action are supposed to redirect to a generic action, that in turn will present my view. The "middleware" action redirect correctly and it also send the parameters but the "recieving action" don't handle or recieve the parameters.
I'm totally clueless here, is it not possible to redirect to an action that in turn redirect to another action or what is the problem?
The route specification looks a bit odd.
I think it should be possibly:
[HttpGet("Customer/Device/{id}")]
public IActionResult Device(string id, bool like)
{
}
Now the URL it tried to redirect you to should work. Id from URL, and the like parameter from query.
If you want both in URL:
[HttpGet("Customer/Device/{id}/{like}")]
public IActionResult Device(string id, bool like)
{
}
i have a web application in Razor-MVC and the thing is this:
I have an Action that goes like every actions in MVC {controller}/{action}/{id}
Now... i have another action, that needs to return this view: return View("Xview") with the Model View too. The model view its not a problem, but the route i see when i do the return View("Xview") its like {controller}/{action} without the id... and i need that id in my route.
I know i can make a return RedirecToAction("Xview", new { id = idX }) but i need to use return View(...)
Edit:
The main issue because i need to return the view is because the ModelView in this action fills with temporal data... and in the Xview action, this ModelView its called from database and if i return RedirectToAction then the temporal data is lost, thats why i return View instead preserving my ModelView.
I hope you can help me with that,
Thanks!
Based on the edit to the question, I would say that the real issue is the state of the application. So instead of passing data between from request to request, use the Session object to store temporary results.
The route parameter is used for requests, not responses. Unless you redirect the user as part of your response, which turns out to be a new request.
If you want to return a View then pass any info you need as part of the model or in the ViewBag.
If you would like to reuses existing code (e.g. another action), then you will need to redirect with RedirectToAction.
I have the need to pass a URL to Magento, where it should redirect the User after completing the logout. To store it, I do the following:
$BackTo = Mage::app()->getRequest()->getParam('backto');
if(!empty($BackTo)) {
Mage::getSingleton('core/session')->setBackTo($BackTo);
}
When needed, I retrieve the URL using Mage::getSingleton('core/session')->getBackTo(). The issue is that, while this works well on login, it doesn't work on logout (where it's most needed). I can store the session variable, I can also immediately retrieve it, but, when I am in logout.phtml, where the redirect JavaScript is located, such variable is set to null.
I suspect that the redirect performed by Magento upon logout has something to do with this "disappearing" session variable, but I can't say for sure.
For completeness, here is the relevant code (there's more code than this, but they are mainly auxiliary functions, which don't get called on logout).
Account Controller
class MyPackage_Redirectplugin_AccountController extends Mage_Customer_AccountController {
/**
* #see AccountController:logoutAction()
*/
public function logoutAction() {
$this->_getSession()
->logout()
->setBeforeAuthUrl(Mage::getUrl());
// Store the "back to" URL in a session variable
$this->StoreBackToURL();
$this->_redirect('*/*/logoutSuccess');
}
protected function StoreBackToURL() {
// Store the value of the "backto" argument, if it was passed
$BackTo = Mage::app()->getRequest()->getParam('backto');
if(!empty($BackTo)) {
Mage::getSingleton('core/session')->setBackTo($BackTo);
// At this point I can see the correct value stored in the session variable
}
}
}
Logout.phtml
// The following command returns null
$redirectURL = Mage::getSingleton('core/session')->getBackTo();
Thanks in advance for the help.
Update 12/09/25 - Found a workaround
Since I couldn't find a way to pass a session variable to the logout page opened by redirect, I chose an alternative way: I'm passing it via the URL. Specifically, I implemented a logoutAction() which calls $this->_redirect('*/*/logoutSuccess', array('myvar' => $MyValue));.
In the template, where I have to do the redirect, I simply read such parameter using Mage::helper('core')->urlDecode(Mage::app()->getRequest()->getParam('myvar'));.
I'm aware that there might have been better ways to implement the whole thing, but I needed a bug fix solution and this does the job. Thanks to all people who answered.
The cleanest option which I see (no controller rewrite necessary!) is to observe the dynamically-dispatched controller_action_postdispatch_customer_account_logout event - see the relevant line fromMage_Core_Controller_Varien_Action::postDispatch(). The postDispatch() method is called after the controller action completes.
Example observer method:
public function logoutRedirect($obs)
{
$redirectUrl = Mage::getUrl(/* url args */);
$obs->getControllerAction()->getResponse()->setRedirect($redirectUrl);
}
Doing this will redirect the user to the desired URL directly upon logout meaning that the logoutSuccess page with the JS redirect will not be accessed.
If the desire is to have the logoutSuccess page render as normal, but redirect to a different URL, this can be achieved a couple of ways:
1. By creating a custom template
2. By creating a custom template block class, overriding the getUrl() method to retrieve the URL of your choice, and assigning that as block to render in the content area (by removing or displacing the customer_logout block) in a custom layout XML update file.
just observe this event customer_logout, and when event call method you save the session key on database.
Learn more: http://www.magentocommerce.com/wiki/5_-_modules_and_development/reference/events
http://www.magentocommerce.com/wiki/5_-_modules_and_development/0_-_module_development_in_magento/customizing_magento_using_event-observer_method
GL.
Update 12/09/25 - Found a workaround
This workaround has also been posted in the question itself.
Since I couldn't find a way to pass a session variable to the logout page opened by redirect, I chose an alternative way: I'm passing it via the URL. Specifically, I implemented a logoutAction() which calls $this->_redirect('*/*/logoutSuccess', array('myvar' => $MyValue));.
In the template, where I have to do the redirect, I simply read such parameter using Mage::helper('core')->urlDecode(Mage::app()->getRequest()->getParam('myvar'));.
I'm aware that there might have been better ways to implement the whole thing, but I needed a bug fix solution and this does the job. Thanks to all people who answered.
I have footer view that's included on all my pages which contains a form. I would like to be able to make use of CI's form validation library to validate the form. Is that possible?
Currently the form posts back to the current page using the PHP_SELF environment variable. I don't want to get it to post to a controller because when validation fails it loads the controller name in the address bar, which is not the desired behaviour.
Any suggestions gratefully received.
Thanks,
Gaz
One way, whilst far from ideal, would be to create a "contact" function in every controller. This could be in the form of a library/helper.
CI doesn't natively let you call one controller from another, although I believe there are extensions that enable this.
Another option would be an AJAX call instead, which would allow you to post to a generic controller, validate etc whilst remaining on the current page.
In this use case, I would definitely go for an AJAX call to a generic controller. This allows you to show errors even before submitting in the origin page.
Another way (slightly more complex), involves posting your form data to a generic controller method, passing it a hidden input containing the current URL.
The generic controller method handling your form can then redirect to the page on which the user submitted the form, passing it the validation errors or a success message using flash session variables: $this->session->set_flashdata('errors',validation_errors()) might do the trick (untested)
The good thing about this is that you can use the generic form-handling method for both the ajax case (suppressing the redirect) and the non-ajax case
AJAX would be best, just like everyone else says.
I would redirect the form to one function in one controller, you could make a controller just for the form itself. Then have a hidden value with the return URL. As far as errors go you could send them back with flashdata.
Just remember to never copy paste code, it a bad practice and guarantees bugs.
//make sure you load the proper model
if ($this->form_validation->run() == FALSE){
// invalid
$redirect = $this->input->post('url');
$this->session->set_flashdata('errors',validation_errors());
redirect($redirect);
} else {
/*
success, do what you want here
*/
redirect('send them where ever');
}