791

I have a variable in PHP, and I need its value in my JavaScript code. How can I get my variable from PHP to JavaScript?

I have code that looks like this:

<?php
$val = $myService->getValue(); // Makes an API and database call

On the same page, I have JavaScript code that needs the value of the $val variable to be passed as a parameter:

<script>
    myPlugin.start($val); // I tried this, but it didn't work
    <?php myPlugin.start($val); ?> // This didn't work either
    myPlugin.start(<?=$val?>); // This works sometimes, but sometimes it fails
</script>
0

20 Answers 20

1057
+100
Answer recommended by PHP Collective

There are actually several approaches to do this. Some require more overhead than others, and some are considered better than others.

In no particular order:

  1. Use AJAX to get the data you need from the server.
  2. Echo the data into the page somewhere, and use JavaScript to get the information from the DOM.
  3. Echo the data directly to JavaScript.

In this post, we'll examine each of the above methods, and see the pros and cons of each, as well as how to implement them.

1. Use AJAX to get the data you need from the server

This method is considered the best, because your server side and client side scripts are completely separate.

Pros

  • Better separation between layers - If tomorrow you stop using PHP, and want to move to a servlet, a REST API, or some other service, you don't have to change much of the JavaScript code.
  • More readable - JavaScript is JavaScript, PHP is PHP. Without mixing the two, you get more readable code on both languages.
  • Allows for asynchronous data transfer - Getting the information from PHP might be time/resources expensive. Sometimes you just don't want to wait for the information, load the page, and have the information reach whenever.
  • Data is not directly found on the markup - This means that your markup is kept clean of any additional data, and only JavaScript sees it.

Cons

  • Latency - AJAX creates an HTTP request, and HTTP requests are carried over network and have network latencies.
  • State - Data fetched via a separate HTTP request won't include any information from the HTTP request that fetched the HTML document. You may need this information (e.g., if the HTML document is generated in response to a form submission) and, if you do, will have to transfer it across somehow. If you have ruled out embedding the data in the page (which you have if you are using this technique) then that limits you to cookies/sessions which may be subject to race conditions.

Implementation Example

With AJAX, you need two pages, one is where PHP generates the output, and the second is where JavaScript gets that output:

get-data.php

/* Do some operation here, like talk to the database, the file-session
 * The world beyond, limbo, the city of shimmers, and Canada.
 *
 * AJAX generally uses strings, but you can output JSON, HTML and XML as well.
 * It all depends on the Content-type header that you send with your AJAX
 * request. */

echo json_encode(42); // In the end, you need to `echo` the result.
                      // All data should be `json_encode`-d.

                      // You can `json_encode` any value in PHP, arrays, strings,
                      // even objects.

index.php (or whatever the actual page is named like)

<!-- snip -->
<script>
    fetch("get-data.php")
        .then((response) => {
            if(!response.ok){ // Before parsing (i.e. decoding) the JSON data,
                              // check for any errors.
                // In case of an error, throw.
                throw new Error("Something went wrong!");
            }

            return response.json(); // Parse the JSON data.
        })
        .then((data) => {
             // This is where you handle what to do with the response.
             alert(data); // Will alert: 42
        })
        .catch((error) => {
             // This is where you handle errors.
        });
</script>
<!-- snip -->

The above combination of the two files will alert 42 when the file finishes loading.

Some more reading material

2. Echo the data into the page somewhere, and use JavaScript to get the information from the DOM

This method is less preferable to AJAX, but it still has its advantages. It's still relatively separated between PHP and JavaScript in a sense that there is no PHP directly in the JavaScript.

Pros

  • Fast - DOM operations are often quick, and you can store and access a lot of data relatively quickly.

Cons

  • Potentially Unsemantic Markup - Usually, what happens is that you use some sort of <input type=hidden> to store the information, because it's easier to get the information out of inputNode.value, but doing so means that you have a meaningless element in your HTML. HTML has the <meta> element for data about the document, and HTML 5 introduces data-* attributes for data specifically for reading with JavaScript that can be associated with particular elements.
  • Dirties up the Source - Data that PHP generates is outputted directly to the HTML source, meaning that you get a bigger and less focused HTML source.
  • Harder to get structured data - Structured data will have to be valid HTML, otherwise you'll have to escape and convert strings yourself.
  • Tightly couples PHP to your data logic - Because PHP is used in presentation, you can't separate the two cleanly.

Implementation Example

With this, the idea is to create some sort of element which will not be displayed to the user, but is visible to JavaScript.

index.php

<!-- snip -->
<div id="dom-target" style="display: none;">
    <?php
        $output = "42"; // Again, do some operation, get the output.
        echo htmlspecialchars($output); /* You have to escape because the result
                                           will not be valid HTML otherwise. */
    ?>
</div>
<script>
    var div = document.getElementById("dom-target");
    var myData = div.textContent;
</script>
<!-- snip -->

3. Echo the data directly to JavaScript

This is probably the easiest to understand.

Pros

  • Very easily implemented - It takes very little to implement this, and understand.
  • Does not dirty source - Variables are outputted directly to JavaScript, so the DOM is not affected.

Cons

  • Tightly couples PHP to your data logic - Because PHP is used in presentation, you can't separate the two cleanly.

Implementation Example

Implementation is relatively straightforward:

<!-- snip -->
<script>
    var data = <?php echo json_encode("42", JSON_HEX_TAG); ?>; // Don't forget the extra semicolon!
</script>
<!-- snip -->

Good luck!

27
  • 16
    What about the significant overhead and code complexity asynchronousity introduces when making an AJAX request? When working on a JavaScript light website - making an AJAX request is tedious and not best practices. Commented May 19, 2014 at 14:44
  • 11
    @SecondRikudo In method 3, that example can kill the website. Example: <?php $output = '<!--<script>'; echo json_encode($output); ?>. See this question for details. Solution: Use JSON_HEX_TAG to escape < and > (requires PHP 5.3.0).
    – Pang
    Commented May 21, 2014 at 2:23
  • 2
    Google executes JavaScript. So that argument had little merit. @Pang Commented May 22, 2014 at 6:01
  • 3
    "People don't use X anymore", you'd be surprised. HTML is for content, not data. data-* attributes are almost always abused today to break the separation of concerns. How do you test code that was generated server-side? How do you mock the data for demonstration purposes? Commented Apr 14, 2015 at 8:10
  • 5
    One big problem with the third approach is that it breaks if you have a CSP policy that does not permit unsafe-inline for script-src. This is a primary driver for wanting to do one of the other two approaches, though Using ajax to retrieve single values (that you probably have in-hand at the time the page's PHP is run) is wasteful and inefficient, meaning that the second approach is the easiest to live with. An easy way to handle larger data items is to put data in a script element with an application/json type, which won't break CSP.
    – Synchro
    Commented Aug 11, 2017 at 8:06
115

I usually use data-* attributes in HTML.

<div
    class="service-container"
    data-service="<?= htmlspecialchars($myService->getValue()) ?>"
>

</div>

<script>
    $(document).ready(function() {
        $('.service-container').each(function() {
            var container = $(this);
            var service = container.data('service');

            // Var "service" now contains the value of $myService->getValue();
        });
    });
</script>

This example uses jQuery, but it can be adapted for another library or vanilla JavaScript.

You can read more about the dataset property here: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/HTMLElement.dataset

11
  • 5
    I agree, not wanting to over-analyze and implement a fancy solution for a simple problem. This method separates PHP from Javascript, so that PHP still generates the HTML only, while Javascript can be external to the PHP file.
    – alds
    Commented Jul 30, 2014 at 16:32
  • 2
    I agree this is the best option. It solves all the security issues, without the latency. You can keep JS entirely out of your HTML pages. HTML needs to be served by the application server, but JS (and CSS) does not. It's also more semantic.
    – Ryan
    Commented Apr 14, 2015 at 2:26
  • 1
    @Quentin You should escape ALL output, unless the output is HTML itself.
    – Hayley
    Commented Oct 28, 2015 at 23:57
  • 2
    @asdasd — Well yes, I was just addressing the specific problem with the code in your answer rather than the general case.
    – Quentin
    Commented Oct 28, 2015 at 23:59
  • 1
    @kanji – there's no best practice; div is fine, but you can use any tag you like; has to be in the body though.
    – Timm
    Commented Oct 11, 2018 at 23:09
101

I'm going to try a simpler answer:

Explanation of the problem

First, let's understand the flow of events when a page is served from our server:

  • First PHP is run, it generates the HTML that is served to the client.
  • Then, PHP "dies" (i.e. it literally stops running) as that HTML is delivered to the client. I'd like to emphasize that once the code leaves the server, PHP has stopped being part of the page load, and the server has no access access to it anymore.
  • Then, when the HTML with JavaScript reaches the client, that can then execute the JavaScript on that HTML, provided it is valid Javascript.

So really, the core thing to remember here is that HTTP is stateless. Once a request left the server, the server can not touch it. So, that leaves our options to:

  1. Send more requests from the client after the initial request is done.
  2. Encode what the server had to say in the initial request.

Solutions

That's the core question you should be asking yourself is:

Am I writing a website or an application?

Websites are mainly page based, and the page load times needs to be as fast as possible (for example - Wikipedia). Web applications are more AJAX heavy and perform a lot of round trips to get the client fast information (for example - a stock dashboard).

Website

Sending more requests from the client after the initial request is done is slow as it requires more HTTP requests which have significant overhead. Moreover, it requires asynchronousity as making an AJAX request requires a handler for when it's complete.

I would not recommend making another request unless your site is an application for getting that information from the server.

You want fast response times which have a huge impact on conversion and load times. Making Ajax requests is slow for the initial uptime in this case and unneeded.

You have two ways to tackle the issue

  • Set a cookie - cookies are headers sent in HTTP requests that both the server and client can read.
  • Encode the variable as JSON - JSON looks very close to JavaScript objects and most JSON objects are valid JavaScript variables.

Setting a cookie is really not very difficult, you just assign it a value:

setcookie("MyCookie", $value); // Sets the cookie to the value, remember, do not
                               // Set it with HTTP only to true.

Then, you can read it with JavaScript using document.cookie:

Here is a short hand rolled parser, but the answer I linked to right above this has better tested ones:

var cookies = document.cookie.split(";").
    map(function(el){ return el.split("="); }).
    reduce(function(prev,cur){ prev[cur[0]] = cur[1]; return prev },{});
alert(cookies["MyCookie"]); // Value set with PHP.

Cookies are good for a little data. This is what tracking services often do.

Once we have more data, we can encode it with JSON inside a JavaScript variable instead:

<script>
    var myServerData = <?=json_encode($value)?>; // Don't forget to sanitize
                                                 //server data
</script>

Assuming $value is json_encodeable on the PHP side (it usually is). This technique is what Stack Overflow does with its chat for example (only using .NET instead of PHP).

Application

If you're writing an application - suddenly the initial load time isn't always as important as the ongoing performance of the application, and it starts to pay off to load data and code separately.

My answer here explains how to load data using AJAX in JavaScript:

function callback(data){
    // What do I do with the response?
}

var httpRequest = new XMLHttpRequest;
httpRequest.onreadystatechange = function(){
    if (httpRequest.readyState === 4) { // Request is done
        if (httpRequest.status === 200) { // successfully
            callback(httpRequest.responseText); // We're calling our method
        }
    }
};
httpRequest.open('GET', "/echo/json");
httpRequest.send();

Or with jQuery:

$.get("/your/url").done(function(data){
    // What do I do with the data?
});

Now, the server just needs to contain a /your/url route/file that contains code that grabs the data and does something with it, in your case:

<?php
$val = myService->getValue(); // Makes an API and database call
header("Content-Type: application/json"); // Advise client of response type
echo json_encode($val); // Write it to the output

This way, our JavaScript file asks for the data and shows it rather than asking for code or for layout. This is cleaner and starts to pay off as the application gets higher. It's also better separation of concerns and it allows testing the client side code without any server side technology involved which is another plus.

Postscript: You have to be very aware of XSS attack vectors when you inject anything from PHP to JavaScript. It's very hard to escape values properly and it's context sensitive. If you're unsure how to deal with XSS, or unaware of it - please read this OWASP article, this one and this question.

11
  • 4
    @cHao more generally - encodings are defined as a sequence of characters and the existence of conceptual objects is a philosophical one. However, there are such things as JSON objects and they are defined by the JSON grammar. {} is a valid JSON object - see json.org Commented May 20, 2014 at 3:12
  • 1
    If you're using that definition, though, then all "JSON objects" are valid in JS.
    – cHao
    Commented May 20, 2014 at 5:21
  • 1
    @cHao note the subtlety: JavaScript has its notion of object and JSON has its notion of object - they are not the same. When people misuse the term "JSON object" they mean a JS object, where in JavaScript land - JSON is used as a data serialization format and JSON objects appear inside strings (kind of like SQL queries in server-side languages). However, in this answer the JSON method relies on the fact that most JSON objects are also valid JavaScript object so we write a JSON object into JavaScript code. Commented May 20, 2014 at 6:02
  • 1
    @cHao Ah, but I've foreseen this moment yesterday :) stackoverflow.com/questions/23752156/… Commented May 20, 2014 at 14:45
  • 2
    OK, you got me there. :) It's still safe, though; PHP's default behavior is to escape such characters (along with other non-ASCII chars), so they never make their way into the output except as \u2028 etc. You'd have to explicitly tell it not to do that.
    – cHao
    Commented May 20, 2014 at 15:02
53
<script>
  var jsvar = <?php echo json_encode($PHPVar); ?>;
</script>

json_encode() requires:

  • PHP 5.2.0 or more
  • $PHPVar encoded as UTF-8, Unicode.
0
32

Simply use one of the following methods.

<script type="text/javascript">
var js_variable  = '<?php echo $php_variable;?>';
<script>

OR

<script type="text/javascript">
    var js_variable = <?php echo json_encode($php_variable); ?>; 
</script>
4
  • 5
    What value does this add over existing answers? Commented Apr 13, 2015 at 18:59
  • 8
    Keeping it simple and straight. For all users who do have much time to dig into deep explaination Commented Apr 13, 2015 at 19:06
  • May be this is a silly question, but I am absolutely new to PHP world. Once we write the above code in .php file, how do I access the "js_variable" in my JavaScript file or my "index.html" file? Commented Jun 25, 2018 at 15:07
  • @AnkitPrajapati Try to access it by checking document ready state. Using following script. document.onreadystatechange = () => { if (document.readyState === 'complete') { // document ready alert(js_variable) } }; Commented Jun 26, 2018 at 6:42
12

Try this:

<?php
    echo "<script> var x = " . json_encode($phpVariable) . "</script>";
?>

--

-After trying this for a while

Although it works, however it slows down the performance. As PHP is a server-side script while JavaScript is a user side.

5
  • 4
    We're looking for long answers that provide some explanation and context. Don't just give a one-line answer; explain why your answer is right, ideally with citations. Answers that don't include explanations may be removed. This is written on the question. Commented Sep 2, 2014 at 10:09
  • 5
    nothing much to explain write down your php variable in a <script tag> which is echoed in php code Commented Sep 2, 2014 at 10:42
  • 6
    Are you sure? Have you seen the top answer to this question? It explains quite a bit. Not to mention that your solution is not secure. $phpVariable = '42"; alert("I am evil!");'; Commented Sep 2, 2014 at 10:43
  • 1
    is echo added here to print it on web page having this php code in it or is it just the part of syntax to put data into js variable.@YosraNagati Commented Apr 11, 2015 at 8:20
  • it is here to enable javascript to access it Commented Apr 14, 2015 at 12:47
12

I quite like the way the WordPress works with its enqueue and localize functions, so following that model, I wrote a simple class for putting a scripts into page according to the script dependencies, and for making additional data available for the script.

class mHeader {

    private $scripts = array();

    /**
     * @param string $id        Unique script identifier
     * @param string $src      Script src attribute
     * @param array  $deps       An array of dependencies ( script identifiers ).
     * @param array  $data       An array, data that will be json_encoded and available to the script.
     */
    function enqueue_script($id, $src, $deps = array(), $data = array()) {
        $this->scripts[$id] = array('src' => $src, 'deps' => $deps, 'data' => $data);
    }

    private function dependencies($script) {
        if ($script['deps']) {
            return array_map(array($this, 'dependencies'), array_intersect_key($this->scripts, array_flip($script['deps'])));
        }
    }

    private function _unset($key, &$deps, &$out) {
        $out[$key] = $this->scripts[$key];
        unset($deps[$key]);
    }

    private function flattern(&$deps, &$out = array()) {

        foreach($deps as $key => $value) {
            empty($value) ? $this->_unset($key, $deps, $out) : $this->flattern( $deps[$key], $out);
        }
    }

    function print_scripts() {

        if (!$this->scripts)
            return;

        $deps = array_map(array($this, 'dependencies'), $this->scripts);
        while ($deps)
            $this->flattern($deps, $js);

        foreach($js as $key => $script) {
            $script['data'] && printf("<script> var %s = %s; </script>" . PHP_EOL, key($script['data']), json_encode(current( $script['data'])));
            echo "<script id=\"$key-js\" src=\"$script[src]\" type=\"text/javascript\"></script>" . PHP_EOL;
        }
    }
}

The call to the enqueue_script() function is for adding script, setting the source and dependencies on other scripts, and additional data needed for the script.

$header = new mHeader();

$header->enqueue_script('jquery-ui', '//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.10.4/jquery-ui.min.js', array('jquery'));
$header->enqueue_script('jquery', '//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js');
$header->enqueue_script('custom-script', '//custom-script.min.js', array('jquery-ui'), array('mydata' => array('value' => 20)));

$header->print_scripts();

And, print_scripts() method of the above example will send this output:

<script id="jquery-js" src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script id="jquery-ui-js" src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.10.4/jquery-ui.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script> var mydata = {"value":20}; </script>
<script id="custom-script-js" src="//custom-script.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>

Regardless the fact that the script 'jquery' is enqueued after the 'jquery-ui', it is printed before because it is defined in 'jquery-ui' that it depends on 'jquery'. Additional data for the 'custom-script' are inside a new script block and are placed in front of it, it contains mydata object that holds additional data, now available to 'custom-script'.

0
10
  1. Convert the data into JSON
  2. Call AJAX to recieve JSON file
  3. Convert JSON into Javascript object

Example:

STEP 1

<?php

   $servername = "localhost";
   $username = "";
   $password = "";
   $dbname = "";
   $conn = new mysqli($servername, $username, $password, $dbname);

   if ($conn->connect_error) {
      die("Connection failed: " . $conn->connect_error);
   } 

   $sql = "SELECT id, name, image FROM phone";
   $result = $conn->query($sql);

   while($row = $result->fetch_assoc()){ 
      $v[] = $row;    
   }

  echo json_encode($v);

  $conn->close();
?>

STEP 2

function showUser(fnc) {
   var xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();

   xhttp.onreadystatechange = function() {
      if (this.readyState == 4 && this.status == 200) {
         // STEP 3    
         var p = JSON.parse(this.responseText);
      }
   }
}
0
10

I have come out with an easy method to assign JavaScript variables using PHP.

It uses HTML5 data attributes to store PHP variables and then it's assigned to JavaScript on page load.

Example:

<?php
    $variable_1 = "QNimate";
    $variable_2 = "QScutter";
?>
    <span id="storage" data-variable-one="<?php echo $variable_1; ?>" data-variable-two="<?php echo $variable_2; ?>"></span>
<?php

Here is the JavaScript code

var variable_1 = undefined;
var variable_2 = undefined;

window.onload = function(){
    variable_1 = document.getElementById("storage").getAttribute("data-variable-one");
    variable_2 = document.getElementById("storage").getAttribute("data-variable-two");
}
2
  • 4
    While data attributes are a reasonable solution to the problem, you end up with a similar problem to the original question if you don't escape the data in them. It's just you need to escape them for HTML instead of JS.
    – Quentin
    Commented Aug 19, 2015 at 14:22
  • This strategy was already detailed in another answer.
    – miken32
    Commented Sep 1, 2021 at 19:20
8
myPlugin.start($val); // Tried this, didn't work

It doesn't work because $val is undefined as far as JavaScript is concerned, i.e. the PHP code did not output anything for $val. Try viewing the source in your browser and here is what you'll see:

myPlugin.start(); // I tried this, and it didn't work

And

<?php myPlugin.start($val); ?> // This didn't work either

This doesn't work because PHP will try to treat myPlugin as a constant and when that fails it will try to treat it as the string 'myPlugin' which it will try to concatenate with the output of the PHP function start() and since that is undefined it will produce a fatal error.

And

 myPlugin.start(<?=$val?> // This works sometimes, but sometimes it fails

While this is most likely to work, since the PHP code is producing valid JavaScript with the expected arguments, if it fails, chances are it's because myPlugin isn't ready yet. Check your order of execution.

Also you should note that the PHP code output is insecure and should be filtered with json_encode().

EDIT

Because I didn't notice the missing parenthesis in myPlugin.start(<?=$val?> :-\

As @Second Rikudo points out, for it to work correctly $val would need to contain the closing parenthesis, for example: $val="42);"

Meaning that the PHP will now produce myPlugin.start(42); and will work as expected when executed by the JavaScript code.

1
  • JSON encode your data: myPlugin.start(<?=json_encode($val)?>);
    – kingprawn
    Commented Jan 30, 2015 at 8:57
6

Here is is the trick:

  1. Here is your 'PHP' to use that variable:

    <?php
        $name = 'PHP variable';
        echo '<script>';
        echo 'var name = ' . json_encode($name) . ';';
        echo '</script>';
    ?>
    
  2. Now you have a JavaScript variable called 'name', and here is your JavaScript code to use that variable:

    <script>
         console.log("I am everywhere " + name);
    </script>
    
3
  • Is there any way to get it so that it doesnt actually print into the source code? I have a massive array that I am passing, and it clogs up the source. Commented Aug 12, 2017 at 18:06
  • 1
    Can you provide an example test case ? Commented Aug 15, 2017 at 13:22
  • 1
    Isn't this same as "3. Echo the data directly to JavaScript" in this answer? That one looks even better.
    – kanji
    Commented Feb 12, 2018 at 12:04
3

Let's say your variable is always integer. In that case this is easier:

<?PHP
    $number = 4;

    echo '<script>';
    echo 'var number = ' . $number . ';';
    echo 'alert(number);';
    echo '</script>';
?>

Output:

<script>var number = 4;alert(number);</script>

Let's say your variable is not an integer, but if you try above method you will get something like this:

<script>var number = abcd;alert(number);</script>

But in JavaScript this is a syntax error.

So in PHP we have a function call json_encode that encode string to a JSON object.

<?PHP
    $number = 'abcd';

    echo '<script>';
    echo 'var number = ' . json_encode($number) . ';';
    echo 'alert(number);';
    echo '</script>';
?>

Since abcd in JSON is "abcd", it looks like this:

<script>var number = "abcd";alert(number);</script>

You can use same method for arrays:

<?PHP
    $details = [
    'name' => 'supun',
    'age' => 456,
    'weight' => '55'
    ];

    echo '<script>';
    echo 'var details = ' . json_encode($details) . ';';
    echo 'alert(details);';
    echo 'console.log(details);';
    echo '</script>';
?>

And your JavaScript code looks like this:

<script>var details = {"name":"supun","age":456,"weight":"55"};alert(details);console.log(details);</script>

Console output

Enter image description here

1

I'll assume that the data to transmit is a string.

As other commenters have stated, AJAX is one possible solution, but the cons outweigh the pros: it has a latency and it is harder to program (it needs the code to retrieve the value both server- and client-side), when a simpler escaping function should suffice.

So, we're back to escaping. json_encode($string) works if you encode the source string as UTF-8 first in case it is not already, because json_encode requires UTF-8 data. If the string is in ISO-8859-1 then you can simply use json_encode(utf8_encode($string)); otherwise you can always use iconv to do the conversion first.

But there's a big gotcha. If you're using it in events, you need to run htmlspecialchars() on the result in order to make it correct code. And then you have to either be careful to use double quotes to enclose the event, or always add ENT_QUOTES to htmlspecialchars. For example:

<?php
    $myvar = "I'm in \"UTF-8\" encoding and I have <script>script tags</script> & ampersand!";
    // Fails:
    //echo '<body onload="alert(', json_encode($myvar), ');">';
    // Fails:
    //echo "<body onload='alert(", json_encode($myvar), ");'>";
    // Fails:
    //echo "<body onload='alert(", htmlspecialchars(json_encode($myvar)), ");'>";

    // Works:
    //echo "<body onload='alert(", htmlspecialchars(json_encode($myvar), ENT_QUOTES), ");'>";
    // Works:
    echo '<body onload="alert(', htmlspecialchars(json_encode($myvar)), ');">';

    echo "</body>";

However, you can't use htmlspecialchars on regular JavaScript code (code enclosed in <script>...</script> tags). That makes use of this function prone to mistakes, by forgetting to htmlspecialchars the result when writing event code.

It's possible to write a function that does not have that problem, and can be used both in events and in regular JavaScript code, as long as you enclose your events always in single quotes, or always in double quotes. Here is my proposal, requiring them to be in double quotes (which I prefer):

<?php
    // Optionally pass the encoding of the source string, if not UTF-8
    function escapeJSString($string, $encoding = 'UTF-8')
    {
        if ($encoding != 'UTF-8')
            $string = iconv($encoding, 'UTF-8', $string);
        $flags = JSON_HEX_TAG|JSON_HEX_AMP|JSON_HEX_APOS|JSON_HEX_QUOT|JSON_UNESCAPED_SLASHES;
        $string = substr(json_encode($string, $flags), 1, -1);
        return "'$string'";
    }

The function requires PHP 5.4+. Example usage:

<?php
    $myvar = "I'm in \"UTF-8\" encoding and I have <script>script tags</script> & ampersand!";
    // Note use of double quotes to enclose the event definition!
    echo '<body onload="alert(', escapeJSString($myvar), ');">';
    // Example with regular code:
    echo '<script>alert(', escapeJSString($myvar), ');</script>';
    echo '</body>';
1

After much research, I found the easiest method is to pass all kinds of variables easily.

In the server script, you have two variables, and you are trying to send them to the client scripts:

$php_var1 ="Hello world";
$php_var2 ="Helloow";
echo '<script>';
echo 'var js_variable1= ' . json_encode($php_var1) . ';';
echo 'var js_variable2= ' . json_encode($php_var2) . ';';
echo '</script>';

In any of your JavaScript code called on the page, simply call those variables.

1

PHP

$fruits = array("apple" => "yellow", "strawberry" => "red", "kiwi" => "green");
<script>
    var color = <?php echo json_encode($fruits) ?>;
</script>
<script src="../yourexternal.js"></script>

JS (yourexternal.js)

alert("The apple color is" + color['apple'] + ", the strawberry color is " + color['strawberry'] + " and the kiwi color is " + color['kiwi'] + ".");

OUTPUT

The apple color is yellow, the strawberry color is red and the kiwi color is green.

1

This is what works for me in 2022, I used this solution to get the email of the current user

I create a shortcode using PHP and added it to PHP .function:

function my_get_current_user_email(){
    $current_user = wp_get_current_user();
    $email = $current_user->user_email;
    return $email;  
} 
add_shortcode( 'get_email', 'my_get_current_user_email');

Then use a div to wrap the shortcode:

 <div id="target-content" style="display: none;">
[get_email]
 </div>

Finally, access the content of the Div with JavaScript:

const databox = document.getElementById("target-content");
const dataContent = databox.textContent;
console.log(dataContent)

This work perfectly for what I wanted and I hope it will work for you too.

0

I don't have much idea of other solutions but if your data does't consist of any sensitive information then you can use it in this way

  1. get data in to a HTML tag and give it an ID
  2. set that tag visibility to hidden & fetch data to Javascript

here it how I used it

1.

<p id="YourID"> <?php echo $variableName ?> </p>
<script>
   document.getElementById("YourID").style.visibility = "hidden";
   let VariableName = document.getElementById("YourID").textContent;
</script>

Remember if you use this method then user can see variable value from inspect(Devloper) Mode and they can even modify it !

-2
<?php

    $val = $myService->getValue(); // Makes an API and database call

    echo "
        <script>
            myPlugin.start({$val});
        </script> ";

?>
0
-2

we can do it using php heredoc:

<?php
    
$inPhpVar = "i am php var";

$ScriptInline = <<<JS
<script>
alert('{$inPhpVar} that used in js code');
</script>
JS;

echo $ScriptInline;

?>
-3

As per your code

<$php
     $val = $myService->getValue(); // Makes an API and database call
     echo '<span id="value">'.$val.'</span>';
$>

Now you can get value using DOM, use innerHTML of span id, in this case you don't need to do any call to server, or Ajax or another thing.

Your page will print it using PHP, and you JavaScript will get value using DOM.

1
  • This code is vulnerable to XSS, because it doesn't escape characters like < and >. Also, similar solutions have already been suggested. Commented Apr 18, 2017 at 10:26

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