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Thursday, 27 September 2012

Using Coockies with PHP

Cookies allow the webmaster to store information about the site visitor on their computer to be accessed again the next time they visit. One common use of cookies is to store your username and password on your computer so you don't need to login again each time you visit a website. Cookies can also store other things such as your name, last visit, shopping cart contents, etc.
The main difference between a cookie and a session is that a cookie is stored on your computer, and a session is not. Although cookies have been around for many years and most people do have them enabled, there are some who do not. Cookies can also be removed by the user at any time, so don't use them to store anything too important.
A cookie is set with the following code:setcookie(name, value, expiration)
  
The above code sets a cookie in the visitor's browser called "AboutVisit". The cookie sets the value to the current date, and set's the expiration to be be in 30 days (2592000 = 60 seconds * 60 mins * 24 hours * 30 days.)
Now let's retrieve the cookie.
  You last visited on ". $last; 
 } 
 else 
 { 
 echo "Welcome to our site!"; 
 } 
 ?>
This code first checks if the cookie exists. If it does, it welcomes the user back and tells them when they last visited. If they are new, it skips this and prints a generic welcome message.
TIP: If you are calling a cooking on the same page you plan to set one - be sure you retrieve it first, before you overwrite it!
To destroy the cookie, simply use setcookie again, only set the expiration date to be in the past. This is often done when you 'logout' of a site. Here is an example:
  
REMEMBER:Cookies need to be set in the header. This means they must be sent before any HTML is set to the page, or they will not work.

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