It is doable, no problem.
There is the $_REQUEST
array that merges GET, POST, and COOKIE values but the better way would be to handle GET and POST manually in your script.
Just have your engine check both $_GET["variable"]
and $_POST["variable"]
and use whichever is set. If a variable is set in both methods, you need to decide which one you want to give precedence.
The only notable difference between the two methods is that a GET parameter has size limitations depending on browser and receiving web server (POST has limitations too, but they are usually in the range of several megabytes).
I think the general rule is that a GET string should never exceed 1024 characters.
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