14

I'm setting up a form in ASP classic and it will reload after submission (action self)

But this time it shows results of previous submissions, so how can I check that a POST submission has been made?

Like in PHP:

if($_POST['submit']) {
  show results...
}

1 Answer 1

34

You have several options:

Method 1 - Check the request method:

If Request.ServerVariables("REQUEST_METHOD") = "POST" Then
    'Show Results...
End If

Method 2 - add a hidden field to your form with a value then check if that value has been posted:

If Request.form("HiddenValue") = "1" Then
    'Show Results...
End If

Method 3 - Check if the request.form collection contains items:

If Request.Form.Count > 0 Then
    'Show Results...
End If

Method 4 - Post to a querystring (i.e. set action of <form> to ?post=yes)

If Request.QueryString("post") = "yes" Then
    'Show Results...
End If

Which one to pick?

My preferred option is method 4 – as it’s easily visible in the address bar as to what’s going on – if for some reason I want to avoid presenting this level of detail in the url, I tend to use option 3 as it’s easy to implement, requires no changes on the source forms & is reliable. As for the other two methods:

  • Method 1 – I tend to avoid relying on server variables if I don’t have 100% control over the server – no real justification for that, just a general habit I tend to work with.
  • Method 2 – You could substitute a hidden field for another field that will always contain a value.
4
  • Thats nice, but which would you recommend? How do the different approaches compare? Commented May 21, 2012 at 12:29
  • @AnthonyWJones Aye, good point, answer edited to give a bit of clarification.
    – HeavenCore
    Commented May 21, 2012 at 12:47
  • 6
    FWIW, I would recommend Method 1. Weird FUD over a server you don't control is irrational, if you can't trust the server to do something basic like this then perhaps you should find a different host. The REQUEST_METHOD variable is there for the express purpose of detecting which HTTP Method is being used. Methods 2 and 4 require the developer to pollute their code with unnecessary content so IMO should be avoided when alternatives are available. Method 4 is also a pretty good approach but lacks the clarity of purpose that Method 1 does. Commented May 22, 2012 at 9:15
  • I think even IIS can get the REQUEST_METHOD variable right. Commented Aug 25, 2014 at 18:03

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.