I am showing Captcha in this way:
<img src="ReturnCaptcha2.php" alt="CAPTCHA" width="100" height="50">
I have a hyperlink named "Reload" near it. I want to recall that PHP file without refreshing my page. Probably, AJAX is involved in it. Ple开发者_C百科ase assist.
Isn't there some parameter with a timestamp or something, so that the request does not get cached? Why not substitute the src with something like (using jquery)
$("img#your-selector").attr("src","ReturnCaptcha2.php?_="+((new Date()).getTime()));
<a href="javascript:;" title="Reload Image"
onclick="document.getElementById('captcha').src = 'cimage.php?' + Math.random();
return false">
<img src="cimage.php" alt="Enter captcha" title="Enter captcha" id="captcha"/>
</a>
Here is the code I use with Secureimage PHP Captcha.
<form method="POST">
<input type="hidden" name="PHPSESSID" value="0b21dde61d891cd" />
<img id="siimage" src="securimage_show.php?sid=2ef186788e" alt="CAPTCHA Image" width="126" height="36" /><br />
<input type="text" name="code" /><br />
<a href="#" onclick="document.getElementById('siimage').src = 'securimage_show.php?' + Math.random(); return false">Reload Image</a>
<input type="submit" value="Submit Form" />
</form>
Why not use http://recaptcha.net/ and save yourself the trouble of it all? They will just handle the Captcha for you.
Here is some integration info on PHP and recaptcha: http://www.google.com/recaptcha/plugins/php
as I mentioned, it is not difficult at all to integrate into your webapp. Give it a try!
Maybe something like:
function reloadCaptcha()
{
img = document.getElementById('captcha');
img.src = 'ReturnCaptcha2.php';
}
And then add a button with onclick="reloadCaptcha();"
.
I haven't tested it, and I'm no js guru, so not sure if it will work.
one more approach can be use a little ajax.. on your refresh button give the action as: onclick=javascript:reloadCaptcha();
in this reloadCaptcha function, give a call to your captcha.php and update the div holding your captcha with the return value. you can easily return a html and then embed it in the div.
Here is another one.
It creates global variable. Checks for existance.
function get_captcha(){
//get original url refresh
console.log('captcha requested.');
if(typeof window.captcha_src === 'undefined'){
window.captcha_src = document.getElementById('captcha').src;
}
document.getElementById('captcha').src = window.captcha_src + '&nocache=' + Math.random();
}
You can even make a link and reload your captcha in same division. If it's not a problem.
Enter Image Text <input name="captcha" type="text">
<img src="captcha.php" /><br>
<a href="captcha.php">Reload Captcha</a><br/>
well i have solved this problem with a simple trick;
instead of putting the captcha in <img>
put that in an <iframe>
and use javascript to reload it when u require
Javascript To Reload:
function reloadCaptcha()
{
document.getElementById('cap').src='captcha.php';
}
Actual HTML:
<iframe id="cap" src="captcha.php"></iframe>
<input type="button" value="reload" onclick="reloadCaptcha();"/>
it solves my problem, correct me if i am wrong somewhere
@meme: I use same thing, but with jquery. If you need a few capthcas in one page:
<img class="captcha" src="/securimage/securimage_show.php" alt="CAPTCHA Image">
<a class="capcha-refresh" href="#" ><img src="/images/Refresh-icon.png"></a>
And js function:
$('.capcha-refresh').click(function(a){
$('.captcha').attr('src','/securimage/securimage_show.php?' + Math.random());
a.preventDefault();
})
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