Difference between revisions of "PHP"
Line 127: | Line 127: | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
if ( condition ) { | |||
executed if condition is true | |||
} else { | |||
executed if condition false | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
while loop | |||
<pre> | |||
while ( conditions ) { | |||
statements execute if true, then repeat, until false | |||
} | |||
</pre> | |||
== Operators == | |||
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" align="center" | |||
! operator | |||
! meaning | |||
|- | |||
| == | |||
| equal-to operator | |||
|- | |||
| and or && | |||
| compares two conditions both must be true | |||
|- | |||
| or or <nowiki>||</nowiki> | |||
| compares two and either must be true | |||
|} |
Revision as of 21:51, 21 July 2007
PHP is a server side scripting language.
Basic Syntax & Commands
PHP statements are always terminated with semicolon (;).
Single quotes are used to mark start and end of text ()
All variable names in PHP start with dollar sign ($).
PHP is a loosely typed language. Variables may contain any type of data.
Example:
$variable_name = "Semper Fidelis";
Equal sign is called the assignment operator since it assigns values to variables.
Comments begin with //
or /* */
arithmetic operators enable you to add, subtract, multiply, & divide.
concatenation operator allows you to add strings of text.
Example:
$variable_name = "Hello" . " there" . " world!";
Assigns value of "Hello there world!" without quotes.
Examples:
variable | comment |
---|---|
$var1 = 'PHP'; | Assigns value of "PHP" to var1 |
$var2 = 5; | Assigns value of 5 to $var2 |
$var3 = $var2 + 1; | Assigns value of 6 to $var3 |
$var2 = $var1; | Assigns value of "PHP" to $var2 |
echo($var1); | Outputs "PHP" |
echo($var2); | Outputs "PHP" |
echo($var3); | Outputs 6 |
echo($var1 . ' rules!'); | Outputs "PHP rules!" |
echo("var1 rules!"); | Outputs "PHP rules!" |
echo('var1 rules!'); | Outputs '$var1 rules!' |
NOTE: Double quotes around text enables the variable name to be inserted & value is displayed. This is called variable interpolation. Single quotes will not interpolate the variable name.
Arrays
A special variable that contains multiple values.
Simple format:
$array_name = array('test1', 'test2', 69);
To retrieve a value stored in an array you need the index.
Generally, arrays use incrementing integers that start with zero as their indices. Indices act as pointers to precisely locate a value in an array.
Expanding on simple format:
code | comment |
---|---|
echo($array_name[0]); | Outputs 'test1' |
echo($array_name[1]); | Outputs 'test2' |
echo($array_name[2]); | Outputs 69 |
$array_name[1] = 'wiki1'; | Assign a new value |
$array_name[3] = 'wiki2'; | Create a new element |
$array_name[] = 'transformers'; | Add element to end of array. |
echo($array_name[4]); | Outputs "transformers" |
Arrays can use strings for indices. This is called an associative array because we can associate values with meaningful indices.
Example:
$weight['robert'] = 225;
$weight['gene'] = 180;
$weight['julie'] = 103;
User Interaction & Forms
Variables can be separated in s query string by an ampersand (&). You may use the ampersand multiple times.
Control Structures
if-else statement
if ( condition ) { executed if condition is true } else { executed if condition false
while loop
while ( conditions ) { statements execute if true, then repeat, until false }
Operators
operator | meaning |
---|---|
== | equal-to operator |
and or && | compares two conditions both must be true |
or or || | compares two and either must be true |