PHP Lecture
PHP Lecture
Science Calculations
System
System
C uses curly
braces { } for
code blocks.
Scripting/
Interpreted
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_programming_languages
About the PHP Language
• Syntax inspired by C
- Curly braces, semicolons, no significant whitespace
• Syntax inspired by perl
- Dollar signs to start variable names, associative arrays
• Extends HTML to add segments of PHP within an HTML file
Philosophy of PHP
• You are a responsible and intelligent programmer.
• You know what you want to do.
• Some flexibility in syntax is OK - style choices are OK.
• Let’s make this as convenient as possible.
• Sometimes errors fail silently.
<h1>Hello from Dr. Chuck's HTML Page</h1>
<p>
<?php
echo "Hi there.\n";
$answer = 6 * 7;
echo "The answer is $answer, what ";
echo "was the question again?\n";
?>
</p>
<p>Yes another paragraph.</p>
<h1>Hello from Dr. Chuck's HTML Page</h1>
<p>
<?php
echo "Hi there.\n";
$answer = 6 * 7;
echo "The answer is $answer, what ";
echo "was the question again?\n";
?>
</p>
<p>Yes another paragraph.</p>
PHP from the Command Line
• You can run PHP from the <?php
echo("Hello World!");
command line - the output
echo("\n");
simply comes out on the ?>
terminal.
• It does not have to be part
of a request-response cycle.
Basic Syntax
Keywords
abstract and array() as break case catch class clone
const continue declare default do else elseif end
declare endfor endforeach endif endswitch endwhile
extends final for foreach function global goto if
implements interface instanceof namespace new or
private protected public static switch $this throw try
use var while xor
http://php.net/manual/en/reserved.ph
p
Variable Names
• Start with a dollar sign ($) followed by a letter or underscore,
followed by any number of letters, numbers, or underscores
• Case matters
http://php.net/manual/en/language.variables.basics.ph
p
Variable Name Weirdness
Things that look like variables but are missing a dollar sign can be
confusing.
$x = 2; $x = 2;
$y = x + 5; y = $x + 5;
print $y; print $x;
5 Parse error
Variable Name Weirdness
Things that look like variables but are missing a dollar sign as an
array index are unpredictable....
$x = 5;
$y = array("x" => "Hello");
print $y[x];
Hello
Strings / Different + Awesome
• String literals can use single quotes or double quotes.
• The backslash (\) is used as an “escape” character.
• Strings can span multiple lines - the newline is part of the
string.
• In double-quoted strings, variable values are expanded.
• Concatenation is the "." not "+" (more later).
http://php.net/manual/en/language.types.string.p
hp
<?php Double Quote
echo "this is a simple string\n";
// Outputs: Variables do 12
$expand = 12;
echo "Variables do $expand\n";
<?php
echo 'this is a simple string'; Single Quote
http://php.net/manual/en/language.basic-
syntax.comments.php
Output
• echo is a language construct - can <?php
$x = "15" + 27;
be treated like a function with
echo $x;
one parameter. Without echo("\n");
parentheses, it accepts multiple echo $x, "\n";
parameters. print $x;
print "\n";
• print is a function - only one print($x);
parameter, but parentheses are print("\n");
optional so it can look like a ?>
language construct.
Expressions
Expressions
• Completely normal like other languages ( + - / * )
• More aggressive implicit type conversion
<?php
$x = "15" + 27;
echo($x); 42
echo("\n");
?>
Expressions
• Expressions evaluate to a value. The value can be a string,
number, boolean, etc.
• Expressions often use operations and function calls. There is
an order of evaluation when there is more than one operator
in an expression.
• Expressions can also produce objects like arrays.
Operators of Note
• Increment / Decrement ( ++ -- )
• String concatenation ( . )
• Equality ( == != )
• Identity ( === !== )
• Ternary ( ? : )
• Side-effect Assignment ( += -= .= etc.)
• Ignore the rarely-used bitwise operators ( >> << ^ | & )
Increment / Decrement
• These operators allow you to both retrieve and increment /
decrement a variable.
• They are generally avoided in civilized code.
$x = 12;
$y = 15 + $x++; x is 13 and y is 27
echo "x is $x and y is $y \n";
Increment / Decrement
• These operators allow you to both retrieve and increment /
decrement a variable.
• They are generally avoided in civilized code.
$x = 12;
$y = 15 + $x; x is 13 and y is 27
$x = $x + 1;
echo "x is $x and y is $y \n";
String Concatenation
PHP uses the period character for concatenation, because the
plus character would instruct PHP to do the best it could to add
the two things together, converting if necessary.
X: 125 X: 125
Y: 10025 Y: 10025
Z: 25 Traceback:"cast.py", line 5
z = int("sam") + 25;
ValueError: invalid literal
Casting
The concatenation operator tries to
convert its operands to strings.
echo "A".FALSE."B\n"; TRUE becomes an integer 1 and then
echo "X".TRUE."Y\n"; becomes a string. FALSE is “not there”
- it is even “smaller” than zero, at
least when it comes to width.
AB
X1Y
Equality versus Identity
The equality operator (==) in PHP is far more aggressive than in
most other languages when it comes to data conversion during
expression evaluation.
<?php
$ans = 42;
if ( $ans == 42 ) {
print "Hello world!\n";
} else {
print "Wrong answer\n"; Hello World!
}
?>
Whitespace Does Not Matter
<?php
$ans = 42;
if ( $ans == 42 ) {
print "Hello world!\n";
} else {
print "Wrong answer\n";
}
?>
$x = 7; no
yes
if ( $x < 2 ) {
x<10 print 'Medium'
print "Small\n";
} elseif ( $x < 10 ) { no
print "Medium\n";
} else { print 'LARGE'
print "LARGE\n";
}
• It is like a loop test that can happen anywhere in the body of the loop.
for($count=1; $count<=600; $count++ ) { Count: 1
if ( $count == 5 ) break; Count: 2
echo "Count: $count\n"; Count: 3
} Count: 4
echo "Done\n"; Done
Finishing an Iteration with continue
The continue statement ends the current iteration. jumps to the top of
the loop, and starts the next iteration.
Count: 1
for($count=1; $count<=10; $count++ ) { Count: 3
if ( ($count % 2) == 0 ) continue; Count: 5
echo "Count: $count\n"; Count: 7
} Count: 9
echo "Done\n"; Done