I have a custom Drupal module displaying some data in a table. Each row has a link which if clicked will delete the relevant row. Specifically, when the link is clicked it will take the user to a confirmation page. This page is really just a drupal form which says 'are you sure' with two buttons: 'Yes', 'No'. I figure I will need to pass the rowID to the confirmation page.
My question: What is the typically way to pass data to a new page in Drupal 7? I guess I could just add the rowID to the URL and use the $_GET[] from the confirmation page... I don't think this is very safe and was wondering if there was a better 'Drupal' way.
Thanks!
You'd use something like the following
<?php
function yourmod_menu() {
// for examlple
$items['yourmod/foo/%/delete'] = array(
'title' => 'Delete a foo',
'page callback' => 'drupal_get_form',
'page arguments' => array('youmode_foo_delete_confirm', 2), // 2 is the position of foo_id
'access arguments' => array('delete foo rows'),
'type' => MENU_CALLBACK,
);
return $items;
}
function yourmod_foo_delete_confirm($form, &$form_state, $foo_id) {
// load the row
$foo = yourmod_get_foo($foo_id);
// build your form, if you need to add anything to the confirm form
// ....
// Then use drupal's confirm form
return confirm_form($form,
t('Are you sure you want to delete the foo %title?',
array('%title' => $foo->title)),
'path/to/redirect',
t('Some description.'),
t('Delete'),
t('Cancel'));
}
?>
You can look here for examples of how core modules do it (have look at node_delete_confirm)