even on old versions of PHP, he can then just use: $GLOBALS['PHP_SELF'] w/o worrying about the Global keyword!
Elias "John Holmes" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message 001001c23a1e$601f5050$b402a8c0@mango">news:001001c23a1e$601f5050$b402a8c0@mango... > Could someone please tell me why i get the following Notice Message > > Notice: Undefined variable: PHP_SELF in > g:\apache_web\intern\looney\index.php on line 101 > > Code affected: > > function WriteNewArticle() > { > Line 100: $smarty = new Smarty; > Line 101: $smarty->assign("PHPSELF", $PHP_SELF); > // etc..... Why? Because $PHP_SELF is an undefined variable. There is nothing assigned to it and you're trying to use it in a function. But, you say, $PHP_SELF is supposed to be the current page. Yes, normally it would with register_globals ON, but you are inside of a function, so it is a whole new variable now. So, like someone else suggested, make it global inside your function Global $PHP_SELF; Or, if you're on a new version, just use $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] and you don't have to worry about global. ---John Holmes... -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php