Sigh. Yes, you could follow these steps, but before you do, please consider learning a little about the all of the advantages of using a templating engine and the principles of separating presentation logic with application logic.
Here's a short article introducing the concept:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template_engine
-Charles
mainefoo wrote:
want to add php code in your templates? here's how open the folder roundcube/skins/default/includes open each html file in your favorite text editor and add
<?PHP ?>
as the very first line. save them as php files. for example header.html is saved as header.php next open the folder roundcube/skins/default/templates open each html file in your favorite text editor and add
<?PHP ?>
as the very first line. find all instances of <roundcube:include file= and change html to php for example: <roundcube:include file="/includes/links.html" /> becomes <roundcube:include file="/includes/links.php" /> in the file addressbook.html around line 32 find the line that reads: <roundcube:object name="addressframe" id="contact-frame" width="100%" height="100%" frameborder="0" src="/watermark.html" /> change watermark.html to read watermark.php save them as php files. for example addcontact.html is saved as addcontact.php open the file roundcube/skins/default/watermark.html add
<?PHP ?>
as the very first line. save watermark.html as watermark.php next open the file roundcube/program/include/main.inc around line 769 find the line that reads: return is_file("$skin_path/templates/$name.html"); change $name.html to $name.php around line 782 find the line that reads: $path = "$skin_path/templates/$name.html"; change $name.html to $name.php save and you're done!! open and run roundcube. everything looks the same and acts the same but now you have the ability to use php in your templates.