One thing first about how you access the GET variables. You check the value using $_GET["pg"] == false
. Note that this expression will fail to do what you expect in a lot situations. In fact, the value will never be directly false
. The only way it will equal to false
if it is empty or unset (in which case you will also get a compiler warning, which you should avoid). Usually a safer way to check if the value was set is using isset( $_GET["pg"] )
.
The next thing I want to address is a security problem you introduce. You use the GET value directly to include a file with that name. If I was a user with malicious intent, I could easily set the pg
value to something, you usually wouldn't expect and which break your website in some way. You generally should avoid using data the user entered somehow (request parameters are user data), and make sure to sanitize them first. A good way to do this, when you plan to use the value as a base to which page you want to include, would be to have some kind of whitelist of acceptable/allowed values. Then you can check if the entered data is in that whitelist and if that is the case, include the correct page. Another simple way would be using a switch
statement to simply go through all accepted cases.
Now finally, onto your problem: I'm not sure if this was just a mistake when you posted the code, but file 1 is missing the include of file 2. As such you will never include file 3, and of course the variable will never be set.
Another problem might be the usage of the GET value. If the value does not contain the exact filename (as in casing and no extra whitespace), then the file won't be found. It is a good idea to echo out the filename you want to include in file 2, just to check if you are making any mistakes. The whitelist as explained above would be another way to make sure that you are trying to include the correct file.
Finally, you should enable error reporting on your server, you can do that either in your server configuration, or by adding the following line to the top of your first file (i.e. file 1):
error_reporting( E_ALL );
That way you will get errors and warnings that will tell you if something unexpected happened at runtime, and you might see your mistake easier.
Old answer
In general it works like this:
File 1:
<?php
include 'file2.php';
echo $myVariable; // prints 'Hello World!'
?>
File 2:
<?php
include 'file3.php';
?>
File 3:
<?php
$myVariable = 'Hello World!';
?>