I have a rather confusing problem.
I have a php file (http://example.com/delete.php)
<?php
session_start();
$user_id = $_SESSION['user_id'];
$logged_in_user = $_SESSION['username'];
require_once('../classes/config.php');
require_once('../classes/post.php');
$post = new Post(NULL,$_POST['short']);
#print_r($post);
try {
if ($post->user_id == $user_id) {
$pdo = new PDOConfig();
$sql = "DELETE FROM posts WHERE id=:id";
$q = $pdo->prepare($sql);
$q->execute(array(':id'=>$post->id));
$pdo = NULL;
}
else {throw new Exception('false');}
}
catch (Exception $e) {
echo 'false';
}
?>
and I’m trying to get this jquery to post data to it, and thus delete the data.
$('.post_delete').bind('click', function(event) {
var num = $(this).data('short');
var conf = confirm("Delete This post? (" + num + ")");
if (conf == true) {
var invalid = false;
$.post("http://example.com/delete.php", {short: num},
function(data){
if (data == 'false') {
alert('Deleting Failed!');
invalid = true;
}
});
if (invalid == false) {
alert("post Has Been Deleted!");
}
else {
event.preventDefault();
return false;
}
}
else {
event.preventDefault();
return false;
}
});
and when I do that, it returns “Post Has Been Deleted!” but does not delete the post.
Confused by that, I made a form to test the php.
<form action="http://example.com/delete.php" method="POST">
<input type="hidden" value="8" name="short"/>
<input type="submit" name="submit" value="submit"/>
</form>
which works beautifully. Very odd.
I have code almost identical for deleting of a comment, and that works great in the javascript.
Any ideas? Beats me.
Thanks in advance,
Will
EDIT:
this works… but doesn’t follow the href at the end, which is the desired effect. Odd.
$('.post_delete').bind('click', function(event) {
var num = $(this).data('short');
var conf = confirm("Delete This Post? (http://lala.in/" + num + ")");
if (conf == true) {
var invalid = false;
$.post("http://example.com/delete/post.php", {short: num},
function(data){
if (data == 'false') {
alert('Deleting Failed!');
invalid = true;
}
});
if (invalid == false) {
alert("Post Has Been Deleted!");
******************************************
event.preventDefault();
return false;
******************************************
}
else {
event.preventDefault();
return false;
}
}
else {
event.preventDefault();
return false;
}
});
If your PHP script delete the post, it doesn’t return anything.
My bad, it’s not answering the real question, but still is a mistake 😉
Actually, it seems that PHP session and AJAX doesn’t quite work well together sometimes.
It means that
if ($post->user_id == $user_id)will never validate, hence the non-deleting problem.2 ways to see this :
$user_idand see if it’s notnull$_SESSION['user_id']with your ajax post and check with it. But not in production, for security reason.1-
Your PHP should return something in every case (at least, when you’re looking for a bug like your actual case).
2-
jQuery is nice to use for AJAX for many reasons. For example, it handles many browsers and make checks for you but moreover, you can handle success and error in the same
.ajax()/.post()/.get()function \o/3-
If you need to send data from a form to a script and then do a redirection, I won’t recommand AJAX which is usually use not to leave the page !
Therefore, you should do what’s in your comment, a form to a PHP script that will apparently delete something and then do a redirection.