vote up 3 vote down star
3

The actually URL which my app uses is:

http://site.com/search.php?search=iPhone

but I would like it to be possible to achieve the same with

http://site.com/iPhone

I have no experience of rewrite rules, how can I set this up?

The solution has worked but the new URL is displayed in the address bar. I thought it would have been possible to set this up so that it appears as though the page location is

http://site.com/iPhone

without changing to display

http://site.com/search.php?search=iPhone

Is this possible? Thanks.

flag

75% accept rate

3 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

Create a file called .htaccess in the root of your website and put this in it.

RewriteEngine on 
Options +FollowSymlinks
RewriteBase / 

RewriteRule ^(.*) search.php?search=$1 [R]

Should do the trick.

I would suggest however that you make it a bit more specific, so maybe require the user of a search directory in your url. eg instead of mysite.com/IPhone use mysite.com/search/IPhone which would work like

RewriteEngine on 
Options +FollowSymlinks
RewriteBase / 

RewriteRule ^search/(.*) search.php?search=$1 [R]

This makes it easier to have normal pages that arnt redirected, such as about us or a basic homepage.

As Chris says, this is not PHP but Apache that does this, and whether it works can depend on your hosting setup.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

You need to specify something like this in your .htaccess file:

RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule /(.*) /search.php?search=$1

Check also:

link|flag
Why does your regex only try to match numbers? Just curious since his example used "iPhone", not a number. – Chris Lutz Feb 17 at 23:34
oops, fixed now... – CMS Feb 18 at 2:06
vote up 1 vote down

Rewrite rules aren't part of PHP as far as I'm aware, but Apache (specifically mod_rewrite) or whatever server you're using. For Apache, you need on the server to have a file called .htaccess, and in it put something like:

RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule ^(\w+)/?$ /index.php?search=$1

^(\w+)/?$ is a regular expression - it matches any word of 1 or more characters, followed by a / maybe. So it changes site.com/iPhone into site.com/index.php?search=iPhone. Sound about right?

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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