Difference between revisions of "Php guide"
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Latest revision as of 18:13, 17 May 2013
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Variables and Datatypes
A variable is a keyword or phrase that acts as an identifier for a value stored in a system’s memory.
Storing Values in a Variable PHP lets you store nearly anything in a variable using one of the following datatypes:
String: Alphanumeric characters Integer: A numeric value, expressed in whole numbers Float: A numeric value, expressed in real numbers (decimals) Boolean: Evaluates to TRUE or FALSE Array: An indexed collection of data Object: A collection of data and methods
PHP is a loosely typed language, which means it determines the type of data being handled based on a “best guess” principle, as opposed to a strictly typed language such as C, which requires you name datatypes for every variable and function. Consider this code snippet:
$foo = "5"; // This is considered a string $bar = $foo + 2; // This converts $foo to an integer (outputs 7)
This might seem confusing at first, but it’s actually intuitive and eliminates debugging if you enclose a number in quotes accidentally.
Strings
A string is any series of characters enclosed in single (') or double (") quotes, or that you create using special heredoc or nowdoc syntax,
Single-Quote Syntax
doesn’t expand special characters or variables. A backslash doesn't need to be escaped to print it as a regular character.
Double-Quote Syntax
special characters interpreted & variables are expanded (unless escaped)
String Concatenation done with a period (.)
$foo = "This is a " . "string.";
$foo = "This is a "; $bar = "string.";
both produce
echo $foo . $bar; This is a string.
PHP is a loosely typed language, it’s not necessary to declare a variable as an integer
Heredoc and Nowdoc syntax skipped...
Integers
Because PHP is a loosely typed language, it’s not necessary to declare a variable as an integer; however, if you find it necessary, you can explicitly cast, or force, a value as an integer using the following syntax:
$foo = 27; // No quotes around a whole number always means integer $bar = (int) "3-peat" // Evaluates to 3, evaluates the numeric value if at the beginning of the string $bat = (int) "ten 4"; // Evaluates to 0, because the string doesn't start with a numeric value
Floating point numbers are numbers with decimal values or real numbers. They should not be used in equality comparisons.
A Boolean value is can contain only one of two values: TRUE or FALSE.
Note A string value will always evaluate to 0 unless it starts with a numeric value (such as “10 years”).
Tips
Browsers don't interpret newline characters (\n), but php can.