I have found an alternate way of achieving what I want, but I'm wondering if there was an easier way. I have a PHP file that builds a Web page that includes forms. The forms are built dynamically based on the contents of a file, and thus there may be one or two or more forms on the page at any time. This means that I have controls named $btnChoice1 (first form), $btnChoice2 (second form), etc. (radio buttons). All of these forms are of a similar format, and so lead to the same PHP page in their action - a parameter is passed in the URL to identify which form it came from.
When the form passes to its action file, another PHP file, there are two ways to get form data: $_POST["control_name"] or $control_name. The problem is, the control name I need has to be built dynamically based on which form it came from. So I need this: $btnName = "btnChoice" . $form_number ; But now I have the tricky bit - $_POST[$btnName] doesn't work because it requires nested substitution of variables, and similarly I can't echo $btnName because that will of course use "btnChoice2" instead of the _contents_ of the control named btnChoice2. Is it possible to 'dereference' (whatever the term is) the variable name twice? I tried $$btnName in the stupid hope that it would first interpret that to $btnChoice2 and then interpret that to the contents of the control, but of course it failed. I ended up using foreach on $_POST to pull out control names and their contents, and comparing the control name to my built-up name - but I was wondering if there's a more elegant way of doing what I wanted? Promise my next question to the group will be short {:v) -- -------------------------------------------- _ _ o o Jason Teagle < [EMAIL PROTECTED] v -------------------------------------------- -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php