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ITEC 325
2016spring
ibarland

homelectshws
D2Lbreeze (snow day)

db
DB connectivity

Due: 2016.Mar.04 (Mon) 16:00.

You will complete your new-Okaymon page by storing the okaymon in a database, and retreiving a summary list of all Okaymon.

  1. Your page at https://php.radford.edu/~yourUserId/itec325/hw06/index.php should have a link to:

    Submit your files on D2L (individually, not as a jar).

  2. (5pts) Make a page which creates the (empty) tables for your database. You don't need to add the energy resistances/weaknesses, to get full credit. Instead, adding this feature is extra credit worth 5% of this assignment.

    Before making the tables, it should drop them — so really, this page is re-setting your database. The resulting page should show the create-statements, and have a link to your index.php. (When grading, it will be convenient to click on your handle-sample pages, to insert new entries and verify they get added.)

  3. (10pts) Modify the ol' Okaymon form handler so that once the information is validated, the Okaymon is added to the database.

  4. (5pts) Make a page which shows a summary list of all Okaymon previously entered: just the Okaymon name and its the associated energy-type. This page should also include a link to the Okaymon-entry-form page. (The list does not need to be particularly pretty — just loop over the results of the database query.)

    Make sure you that you can insert/retrieve values that have “SQL-sensitive” characters like apostrophes, spaces, and semicolons (as well as the “html-sensitive” characters like less-than and ampersand that we've already handled). Automate this testing by adding-to/modifying your sample-handle files. to include such characters.

    Be sure all your pages/programs always close any database connection they open!

  5. (15pts) Each Okaymon-name on the summary list should be a link which, when clicked, brings you to a detailed-information page.

    (The layout of this information does not need to be anything elegant, but it should not be prone to HTML/script injection.)

    Pro tip:

    From hw03 on, you already have a page which prints the summary information (on a successful submit); it used $_POST.

    You can re-factor that page so that instead of reading from $_POST, it reads from some other array, say, “$theOkaymonInfo”. Then:

    • To get the old behavior, $theOkaymonInfo = $_POST; followed by require("print-Okaymon-info.php");.
    • To meet this new requirement for this hw, read the database-info for a Okaymon into $theOkaymonInfo, and then you can just require("print-Okaymon-info.php"); from there!
    Adding a layer of indirection: is there any problem it can't solve?

    Note that this is asking for a link which behaves a little bit like a form-handler, since you won't have a separate URL for every single Okaymon — instead you'll have one page which (given a particular Okaymon-name) pulls the detailed information out of the database. How do you have a link which provides an argument (the Okaymon-name) to another page? One easy way1 is to have the link contain the parameter(s) explicitly, e.g.<a href="Okaymon.php?okaymonName=pugglez">…”, and the receiving page accesses that argument through the $_GET array (e.g., $_GET['okaymonName']).

    If using arbitrary text as part of a URL, you have to guard against characters not usually allowed in URLs. See rawurlencode and its inverse rawurldecode. It is also acceptable to add an ID-number to an okaymon, and use that ID-number for some database lookups. (However, it's a good principle to not going around and adding artificial fields into your database design—things that aren't part of the actual Okaymon info.)

    As always, to guard against HTML/script injection, be sure to call htmlspecialchars on any text which was originally provided by a user (even if retrieved from the database). (This goes for all pages, even if other validation requirements make such escaping moot).

    You don't need to include the Okaymon's energy-biases on this page. If you do, it's extra-credit worth 15% of this homework, done properly.

  6. I'll say it again, just because it's fun: Be sure all your pages/programs always close any database connection they open!

Guidelines


1

Transmitting the arguments through $_GET of course is vulnerable to over-the-shoulder snooping; if you wanted to still use $_POST but not require a “submit” button, you can set the link's onclick attribute to be javascript which (a) sets the value of a hidden input tag, and then (b) does something like document.getElementByID( 'theFormsId' ).submit().

     

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