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I have a situation where nested forms would work great, but apparently nested forms aren't really allowed.

Take this following example:

<form method="post" action="bid.php">
   <input type="hidden" value="11111111" name="auction_id">
   <input type="hidden" value="bid_confirm" name="action">                
    <!-- Holder Ends -->
    <div class="holder2">
        <div class="text">
            Quantity:
        </div>
        <div class="field">
            <input type="text" maxlength="6" value="1" class="small" name="quantity">
        </div>
        <!-- Btn Ends -->                                                    
        <div class="contentClear"></div>
    </div>
    <!-- Holder Ends -->                                                             
    <div class="holder holder3">                                                        
        <div class="field">
            <input type="text" maxlength="15" name="max_bid">
        </div>
        <div class="btn">
            <input type="image" src="images/pixel.gif" class="bid" name="submit">
        </div>
        <!-- Btn Ends -->
        <form method="post" action="make_offer.php?auction_id=11111111">  
            <div class="btn btn_offer">
                <input type="image" src="images/pixel.gif" class="offer" name="submit">
            </div>
            <!-- Btn Ends -->
        </form>                                    
        <div class="contentClear"></div>
    </div>
    <!-- Holder Ends -->            
</form>   

You will see from the above where the nesting would be ideal.

Technically I could just close the first form off before the other one starts as all the required fields have been output auction_id,action,quantity,max_bid however I wanted to avoid this as then the code starts looking messy as the form would open & end in different sections of the code & that isn't very ideal.

Does anyone have any ideas of how to handle this situation without resorting to Javascript?

1 Answer 1

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You could have the second form (to make the offer) an AJAX component where you don't submit the form but still send the data properly. IMO this would be the best approach, but you didn't want to revert to javascript (for some reason).

Another option that would work is instead of having the form insert an iFrame of a page. This page would then have your 2nd form on it and would submit. The issue with this is that you would have to find a way to pass the auctionID to the iFrame. But if you can do this through URL parameters, then it shouldn't be too bad.

It would look a lot like this I think :

    <!-- Btn Ends -->
    <iframe src="pagewithform2.php?auction_id=1111111" width="xx" height="xx" scrolling="no"/>                                  
    <div class="contentClear"></div>
1
  • Thanks for the idea. I ended up just turning the second form into a straight link as it only needed the auction ID which was already being used as a GET variable so no need for a form. :)
    – Brett
    Jan 11, 2013 at 7:55

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