0

I'm hoping that this will be a simple question that someone can answer. I'm looking to build a CodeIgniter application that I can build pretty easily in regular PHP.

Example: I would like to go to http://locahost/gregavola and have rewritten using htaccess file to profile.php?user=gregavola. How can I do this in CodeIgniter?

Usually in htaccess I could write ^(\w+)$ profile.php?user=$1 but that won't work with the paths in CodeIgniter.

Any suggestions?

1
  • I hate codeigniter, "lets make php as confusing as possible" :D Oct 14, 2010 at 21:27

2 Answers 2

1

CodeIgniter turns off GET parameters by default; instead of rewriting the URL to a traditional GET style (IE, with the ?), you should create a user controller and send the request to:

http://localhost/user/info/gregavola

Then in the user controller, add the following stub:

function info($name)
{
    echo $name;
}

From here you would probably want to create a view and pass $name into it:

  $data['name'] = 'Your title';
  $this->load->view('user_info', $data);

You can find all of this in the CodeIgniter User Guide, which is an excellent resource for getting started.

2
  • I was just giving an example of what I did in PHP - not sure how it work in CodeIgniter. How you can create a view of variable? Basically - localhost/gregavola - how can that get redirect to a static page so I figure out who the user is? I apologize for my lack of experience with CodeIgniter - but I'm just trying to learn.
    – gregavola
    Mar 24, 2010 at 15:38
  • Is there a way to not include the users/ or info/? So its localhost/gregavola
    – gregavola
    Mar 24, 2010 at 16:46
0

To map localhost/gregavola to a given controller and function, modify the routes file at application/config/routes.php like so:

$route['(:any)'] = "user/info/$1"

Routes are run in the order they are received, so if you have other routes like localhost/application/dosomething/, you will want to include those routes first so that every page in your entire app doesn't become a user page.

Read more about CI routes here: http://codeigniter.com/user_guide/general/routing.html

Good luck!

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.