Constants in Php - Stack Of Codes

Breaking

Ads

Friday 22 December 2017

Constants in Php

Constants in Php::


A constant is an identifier (name) for a simple value. As the name suggests, that value cannot change during the execution of the script (except for magic constants, which aren't actually constants). A constant is case-sensitive by default. By convention, constant identifiers are always uppercase.

The name of a constant follows the same rules as any label in PHP. A valid constant name starts with a letter or underscore, followed by any number of letters, numbers, or underscores. As a regular expression, it would be expressed thusly: [a-zA-Z_\x7f-\xff][a-zA-Z0-9_\x7f-\xff]*





Example #1 Valid and invalid constant names
<?php

// Valid constant names
define("FOO", "something");
define("FOO2", "something else");
define("FOO_BAR", "something more");

// Invalid constant names
define("2FOO", "something");

// This is valid, but should be avoided:
// PHP may one day provide a magical constant
// that will break your script
define("__FOO__", "something");
?>



- Stack Of Codes

No comments:

Post a Comment

Topics

PHP (27) CodeIgniter (22) SQL (4) Facebook (3) HTML (3) Blogger (2) Constructor (2) Destructor (2) Google (2) How to (2) Aadhaar (1) Agent (1) Browser (1) CSS (1) Cakephp (1) Constants (1) India (1) Ip address (1) JS (1) Jquery (1) Meta Tags (1) Robots (1) Scraping Data (1) escape_str (1) htaccess (1) iS mobile (1) javascript (1) mysqli (1)