I believe that include() returns true|false, so $a would equal true if
the file is included and false if it is not.


On Thu, 14 Oct 2004 10:35:15 -0700 (PDT), Mag <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> I have never done this before (but in my first test it
> seems to work), I am include()ing a file into a
> variable like this:
> 
> $a=include("th-file.php");
> 
> Will this give me any extra problems later on? or is
> this resource intensive?
> 
> The reason I am doing this is because I want to put
> whole pages into a variable then write the contents of
> the variable to a static html file...
> 
> eg:
> $a=include("header.php");
> $a .= "<all the results from my database queries and
> calcalutions etc here>";
> $a .= include "footer.php";
> ->fopen and write $a to newfile: something.html
> 
> Thats the idea anyway.... this is the first time I am
> experimenting with this approach, so I want to know is
> this "legal" in php and if I should be expecting any
> problems. The final pages to output can be around 100k
> I guess and I will be outputting every 3-60 mins.
> 
> Thanks,
> Mag
> 
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