I have several subdomains contained in their own directory above my root site, and an assets folder in my root directory. For example:
/
/assets/
/forums/
/b
There are several ways to achieve this.
form.php
require_once __DIR__ . '/otherfile.php';
If you're using PHP 5.2 or older, you can use dirname(__FILE__)
instead of __DIR__
. Read more about magic constants here.
$_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']
variableThis is the absolute path to your document root: /var/www/example.org/
or C:\wamp\www\
on Windows.
The document root is the folder where your root level files are: http://example.org/index.php would be in $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] . '/index.php'
Usage: require_once $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] . '/include/otherfile.php';
This will probably be a bit overkill for your application if it's very simple.
You can also set the directories where PHP will look for the files when you use require()
or include()
. Check out set_include_path()
here.
Usage: require_once 'otherfile.php';
Note:
I see some answers suggest using the URL inside a require()
. I would not suggest this as the PHP file would be parsed before it's included. This is okay for HTML files or PHP scripts which output HTML, but if you only have a class definition there, you would get a blank result.
why don't you use (../)
require('../folder/file.php');
If one level higher use:
include('../header.php');
if two levels higher:
include('../../header.php');
Fore more, visit: http://forums.htmlhelp.com/index.php?showtopic=2922
Maybe this isn't correct topic and maybe not correct use, but maybe it will help someone. When I wanted to make links in menu from absolute path, as I was jumping from directory to directory and paths were nonstop changing, I wanted to fix to base dir.
So instead of using '../' to go sub-folder (as I didn't know many I needed to go down ../../../), I wrote link as <a href='/first_dir/second_dir/third_dir//..'>
, similar it works also with <img src='/first_dir/second_dir//../logo.svg'>
.
Unfortunately this doesn't work with require_once()
.
PHP 7
You have 2 solutions. You can either use the full URL to the file, for instance if your file is in the 'lib' directory you can use: require_once ('http://www.example.com/lib/myfile.php')
or
You can try the $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']
function in PHP but this isnt always fool proof.
So...you can use this, in both pgm1.php & pgm1.php, and REQUIRE or
INCLUDE works !
function rURI($p){
for($w='',$i=1;$i<(count(explode('/',$_SERVER['PHP_SELF']))-1);$i++,$w.='../');return
$w.$p; }
require rURI('dirA/inc/Xpto.php'); // path from root