There are several ways to achieve this.
Use relative path from 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.
Use the $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']
variable
This is the absolute path to your document root: /var/www/example.org/
or C:wampwww
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';
Use an autoloader
This will probably be a bit overkill for your application if it's very simple.
Set up PHP's include paths
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.
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