$Web Form Parm Lstr: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
<table class="syntaxTable"> | <table class="syntaxTable"> | ||
<tr><th>name</th> | <tr><th>name</th> | ||
<td>The name of the form field, returned by $Web_Form_Name. Required argument if occurrence is not specified, otherwise optional.</td></tr> | <td>The name of the form field, returned by <var>$Web_Form_Name</var>. Required argument if occurrence is not specified, otherwise optional.</td></tr> | ||
<tr><th>occurrence</th> | <tr><th>occurrence</th> | ||
<td>The occurrence number of a form field, or the occurrence number of the form field matching ''name'', if ''name'' is specified. This is an optional argument if ''name'' is specified; otherwise it is required. | <td>The occurrence number of a form field, or the occurrence number of the form field matching ''name'', if ''name'' is specified. This is an optional argument if ''name'' is specified; otherwise it is required. |
Revision as of 22:17, 18 October 2012
<section begin="desc" />Value of form field to longstring<section end="desc" />
$Web_Form_Parm_Lstr retrieves the value of an HTML form field as a longstring.
$Web_Form_Parm_Lstr takes two arguments and returns a longstring or null for any error condition.
Syntax
<section begin="syntax" />%string = $Web_Form_Parm_Lstr( name, occurrence ) <section end="syntax" />
Syntax terms
name | The name of the form field, returned by $Web_Form_Name. Required argument if occurrence is not specified, otherwise optional. |
---|---|
occurrence | The occurrence number of a form field, or the occurrence number of the form field matching name, if name is specified. This is an optional argument if name is specified; otherwise it is required. |
Usage notes
- $Web_Form_Parm_Lstr works much like $Web_Form_Parm, except for the following:
- It can return more than 255 bytes of data into a Longstring.
- It causes request cancellation if the result would be truncated, either on assignment to a target STRING %variable, or as input to a STRING $function argument or subroutine parameter.
- It does not have position and length arguments (arguments 3 and 4).
Examples
If you have an HTML form defined as follows:
<form method="POST" action="myUrl">
Foo:<input type="text" name="foo" size="20">
Bar:<input type="text" name="bar" size="20">
<input type="submit">
</form>
The following will retrieve the values of the Foo
and Bar
fields into longstrings called %foo
and%bar
.
%foo = $web_form_parm_lstr('FOO') %bar = $web_form_parm_lstr('BAR')