Difference between revisions of "PHP-and-MySQL/C2/POST-Variable/English-timed"
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(Created page with '{| border=1 !Time !Narration |- |0:00 |Welcome to the Spoken Tutorial on Post variable. Here I am going to use the same code as that of the 'get.php' page. The same one that I ha…') |
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Revision as of 16:02, 2 January 2013
| Time | Narration |
|---|---|
| 0:00 | Welcome to the Spoken Tutorial on Post variable. Here I am going to use the same code as that of the 'get.php' page. The same one that I have done in my 'get' variable tutorial. |
| 0:13 | If you have not seen that already, please do so and then go through this tutorial. You will be able to know all these codes about. |
| 0:21 | If you already know these codes about and you have not seen the 'get' tutorial, you are welcome to join us. |
| 0:28 | I have got my page with my 'get' as previous |
| 0:31 | I have got a new file called 'post.php' |
| 0:36 | Actually, what I want to do is change this as post and post it as a post variable. |
| 0:44 | So quite simply and logically I will just go through this and change this to post |
| 0:51 | and here is what we call 'post' instead of 'get' and this will work |
| 0:57 | Let me show you my post page |
| 01:00 | there is nothing here. There is no question mark |
| 01:04 | Let me type alex and click here. But nothing has come up |
| 01:09 | that is why |
| 1:11 | do you remember if you are working with another file, you need to change the action |
| 1:19 | let's refresh it |
| 1:22 | I can see alex. Let me click here and this is hello alex |
| 1:28 | next we are in the 'post.php' font and there is no question mark |
| 1:33 | something has been taken across. It has been stored inside a post variable |
| 1:39 | but why it is not showing two users |
| 1:44 | this will be absolutely brilliant if we can say 'password' .Let's call this 'password' |
| 2:02 | I'll say here 'thanks for your password' and let's go back |
| 2:11 | and now, as you can see, this is a password field |
| 2:15 | so I'll type 123 as my password and I click here |
| 2:22 | it says, thanks for your password |
| 2:25 | it has been stored. so it can be used. I can use it, if i want to |
| 2:31 | I'll just change that. so it makes more sense |
| 2:37 | let's do a refresh and resend the data |
| 2:42 | 123, click here and its not displaying. That's why |
| 2:49 | you should check these things. It is easy to make mistakes |
| 2:54 | Let me type 123. Let me click here and it says 'thanks for your password'. and it as given me my password |
| 3:06 | It proves that it has been carried across it has been stored in a post variable |
| 3:12 | but it hasn't shown the user, which could have made sense |
| 3:16 | because there would be no point having these as blocks. They are not readable in any way. |
| 3:22 | and here there would no point having it because people can read your password |
| 3:27 | So it will be very easy for people to look through your internet history. |
| 3:32 | and see you have typed your password. But people might get access to your account with that |
| 3:38 | so you can see this post. These are used for functions, also the amount that can be sent through it |
| 3:45 | so if for example, my password was really long say over 100 characters it will still be accepted |
| 3:52 | but in the 'get' variable you have a hundred character limit |
| 3:57 | so the post thus seem to be useful. But if you are evaluating things, like, trying to sort out some things, you can use the get variable |
| 4:08 | just to see if your data is being passed through. |
| 4:11 | so basically that's post variable |
| 4:14 | you would be using it a lot on projects for form submissions. This brings us to the end of this tutorial |
| 4:22 | This is Siddarth for the Spoken Tutorial Project. Thanks for watching. |