The PHP Hypertext Preprocessor (PHP) is a programming language that allows web developers to create dynamic content that interacts with databases.
PHP is basically used for developing web based software applications.
This tutorial helps you to build your base with PHP.
PHP started out as a small open
source project that evolved as more and more people found out how useful it
was. Rasmus Lerdorf unleashed the first version of PHP way back in 1994.
- PHP is a recursive acronym for "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor".
- PHP is a server side scripting language that is embedded in HTML. It is used to manage dynamic content, databases, session tracking, even build entire e-commerce sites.
- It is integrated with a number of popular databases, including MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, Sybase, Informix, and Microsoft SQL Server.
- PHP is pleasingly zippy in its execution, especially when compiled as an Apache module on the Unix side. The MySQL server, once started, executes even very complex queries with huge result sets in record-setting time.
- PHP supports a large number of major protocols such as POP3, IMAP, and LDAP. PHP4 added support for Java and distributed object architectures (COM and CORBA), making n-tier development a possibility for the first time.
- PHP is forgiving: PHP language tries to be as forgiving as possible.
- PHP Syntax is C-Like.
Common
uses of PHP:
- PHP performs system functions, i.e. from files on a system it can create, open, read, write, and close them.
- PHP can handle forms, i.e. gather data from files, save data to a file, thru email you can send data, return data to the user.
- You add, delete, modify elements within your database thru PHP.
- Access cookies variables and set cookies.
- Using PHP, you can restrict users to access some pages of your website.
- It can encrypt data.
Characteristics
of PHP
Five important characteristics make
PHP's practical nature possible:
- Simplicity
- Efficiency
- Security
- Flexibility
- Familiarity
"Hello
World" Script in PHP:
To get a feel for PHP, first start
with simple PHP scripts. Since "Hello, World!" is an essential
example, first we will create a friendly little "Hello, World!"
script.
As mentioned earlier, PHP is
embedded in HTML. That means that in amongst your normal HTML (or XHTML if
you're cutting-edge) you'll have PHP statements like this:
<html>
<head>
<title>Hello World</title>
<body>
<?php echo
"Hello, World!";?>
</body>
</html>
|
It will produce following result:
Hello, World!
|
If you examine the HTML output of
the above example, you'll notice that the PHP code is not present in the file
sent from the server to your Web browser. All of the PHP present in the Web
page is processed and stripped from the page; the only thing returned to the
client from the Web server is pure HTML output.
All PHP code must be included inside
one of the three special markup tags ate are recognised by the PHP Parser.
<?php PHP code goes here ?>
<? PHP code
goes here ?>
<script language="php"> PHP code goes here
</script>
|
Most common tag is the
<?php...?> and we will also use same tag in our tutorial.
From the next chapter we will start
with PHP Environment Setup on your machine and then we will dig out almost all
concepts related to PHP to make you comfortable with the PHP language.
In order to develop and run PHP Web
pages three vital components need to be installed on your computer system.
- Web Server - PHP will work with virtually all Web Server software, including Microsoft's Internet Information Server (IIS) but then most often used is freely availble Apache Server. Download Apache for free here: http://httpd.apache.org/download.cgi
- Database - PHP will work with virtually all database software, including Oracle and Sybase but most commonly used is freely available MySQL database. Download MySQL for free here: http://www.mysql.com/downloads/index.html
- PHP Parser - In order to process PHP script instructions a parser must be installed to generate HTML output that can be sent to the Web Browser. This tutorial will guide you how to install PHP parser on your computer.
PHP
Parser Installation:
Before you proceed it is important
to make sure that you have proper environment setup on your machine to develop
your web programs using PHP.
Type the following address into your
browser's address box.
http://127.0.0.1/info.php
|
If this displays a page showing your
PHP installation related information then it means you have PHP and Webserver
installed properly. Otherwise you have to follow given procedure to install PHP
on your computer.
This section will guide you to
install and configure PHP over the following four platforms:
- PHP Installation on Linux or Unix with Apache
- PHP Installation on Mac OS X with Apache
- PHP Installation on Windows NT/2000/XP with IIS
- PHP Installation on Windows NT/2000/XP with Apache
Apache
Configuration:
If you are using Apache as a Web
Server then this section will guide you to edit Apache Configuration Files.
Just Check it here : PHP
Configuration in Apache Server
PHP.INI
File Configuration:
The PHP configuration file, php.ini,
is the final and most immediate way to affect PHP's functionality.
Just Check it here: PHP.INI File
Configuration
Windows
IIS Configuration:
To configure IIS on your Windows
machine you can refer your IIS Reference Manual shipped along with IIS.
This chapter will give you an idea of very basic syntax of PHP and very
important to make your PHP foundation strong.Escaping to PHP:
The PHP parsing engine needs a way to differentiate PHP code from other elements in the page. The mechanism for doing so is known as 'escaping to PHP.' There are four ways to do this:Canonical PHP tags:
The most universally effective PHP tag style is:<?php...?> |
Short-open (SGML-style) tags:
Short or short-open tags look like this:<?...?> |
·
Choose the --enable-short-tags configuration
option when you're building PHP.
·
Set the short_open_tag setting in your php.ini
file to on. This option must be disabled to parse XML with PHP because the same
syntax is used for XML tags.
ASP-style tags:
ASP-style tags mimic the tags used by Active Server Pages to delineate code blocks. ASP-style tags look like this:<%...%> |
HTML script tags:
HTML script tags look like this:<script language="PHP">...</script> |
Commenting PHP Code:
A comment is the portion of a program that exists only for the human reader and stripped out before displaying the programs result. There are two commenting formats in PHP:Single-line comments: They are generally used for short explanations or notes relevant to the local code. Here are the examples of single line comments.
<? # This is a comment, and # This is the second line of the comment // This is a comment too. Each style comments only print "An example with single line comments"; ?> |
<? # First Example print <<<END This uses the "here document" syntax to output multiple lines with $variable interpolation. Note that the here document terminator must appear on a line with just a semicolon no extra whitespace! END; # Second Example print "This spans multiple lines. The newlines will be output as well"; ?> |
<? /* This is a comment with multiline Author : Mohammad Mohtashim
Purpose: Multiline Comments Demo
Subject: PHP
*/ print "An example with multi line comments"; ?> |
PHP is whitespace insensitive:
Whitespace is the stuff you type that is typically invisible on the screen, including spaces, tabs, and carriage returns (end-of-line characters).PHP whitespace insensitive means that it almost never matters how many whitespace characters you have in a row.one whitespace character is the same as many such characters
For example, each of the following PHP statements that assigns the sum of 2 + 2 to the variable $four is equivalent:
$four = 2 + 2; // single spaces $four <tab>=<tab2<tab>+<tab>2 ; // spaces and tabs $four = 2+ 2; // multiple lines |
PHP is case sensitive:
Yeah it is true that PHP is a case sensitive language. Try out following example:<html> <body> <? $capital = 67; print("Variable capital is $capital<br>"); print("Variable CaPiTaL is $CaPiTaL<br>"); ?> </body> </html> |
Variable capital is 67 Variable CaPiTaL is |
Statements are expressions terminated by semicolons:
A statement in PHP is any expression that is followed by a semicolon (;).Any sequence of valid PHP statements that is enclosed by the PHP tags is a valid PHP program. Here is a typical statement in PHP, which in this case assigns a string of characters to a variable called $greeting:$greeting = "Welcome to PHP!"; |
Expressions are combinations of tokens:
The smallest building blocks of PHP are the indivisible tokens, such as numbers (3.14159), strings (.two.), variables ($two), constants (TRUE), and the special words that make up the syntax of PHP itself like if, else, while, for and so forthBraces make blocks:
Although statements cannot be combined like expressions, you can always put a sequence of statements anywhere a statement can go by enclosing them in a set of curly braces.Here both statements are equivalent:
if (3 == 2 + 1) print("Good - I haven't totally lost my mind.<br>");
if (3 == 2 + 1) { print("Good - I haven't totally");
print("lost my mind.<br>");
} |
Running PHP Script from Command Prompt:
Yes you can run your PHP script on your command prompt. Assuming you have following content in test.php file<?php echo "Hello PHP!!!!!";
?> |
$ php test.php |
Hello PHP!!!!! |
The main way to store information in the middle of a PHP program is by using a variable.
Here are the most important things to know about variables in PHP.
·
All variables in PHP are denoted with a leading
dollar sign ($).
·
The value of a variable is the value of its most
recent assignment.
·
Variables are assigned with the = operator, with
the variable on the left-hand side and the expression to be evaluated on the
right.
·
Variables can, but do not need, to be declared
before assignment.
·
Variables in PHP do not have intrinsic types - a
variable does not know in advance whether it will be used to store a number or
a string of characters.
·
Variables used before they are assigned have
default values.
·
PHP does a good job of automatically converting
types from one to another when necessary.
·
PHP variables are Perl-like.
PHP has a total of eight data types which we use to construct our variables:
·
Integers: are whole numbers, without a
decimal point, like 4195.
·
Doubles: are floating-point numbers, like
3.14159 or 49.1.
·
Booleans: have only two possible values
either true or false.
·
NULL: is a special type that only has one
value: NULL.
·
Strings: are sequences of characters,
like 'PHP supports string operations.'
·
Arrays: are named and indexed collections
of other values.
·
Objects: are instances of programmer-defined
classes, which can package up both other kinds of values and functions that are
specific to the class.
·
Resources: are special variables that
hold references to resources external to PHP (such as database connections).
The first five are simple types, and the next two (arrays and
objects) are compound - the compound types can package up other arbitrary
values of arbitrary type, whereas the simple types cannot.We will explain only simile data type in this chapters. Array and Objects will be explained separately.
Integers:
They are whole numbers, without a decimal point, like 4195. They are the simplest type .they correspond to simple whole numbers, both positive and negative. Integers can be assigned to variables, or they can be used in expressions, like so:$int_var = 12345; $another_int = -12345 + 12345; |
For most common platforms, the largest integer is (2**31 . 1) (or 2,147,483,647), and the smallest (most negative) integer is . (2**31 . 1) (or .2,147,483,647).
Doubles:
They like 3.14159 or 49.1. By default, doubles print with the minimum number of decimal places needed. For example, the code:$many = 2.2888800; $many_2 = 2.2111200; $few = $many + $many_2; print(.$many + $many_2 = $few<br>.); |
2.28888 + 2.21112 = 4.5 |
Boolean:
They have only two possible values either true or false. PHP provides a couple of constants especially for use as Booleans: TRUE and FALSE, which can be used like so:if (TRUE) print("This will always print<br>");
else print("This will never print<br>");
|
Interpreting other types as Booleans:
Here are the rules for determine the "truth" of any value not already of the Boolean type:
·
If the value is a number, it is false if exactly
equal to zero and true otherwise.
·
If the value is a string, it is false if the
string is empty (has zero characters) or is the string "0", and is
true otherwise.
·
Values of type NULL are always false.
·
If the value is an array, it is false if it
contains no other values, and it is true otherwise. For an object, containing a
value means having a member variable that has been assigned a value.
·
Valid resources are true (although some
functions that return resources when they are successful will return FALSE when
unsuccessful).
·
Don't use double as Booleans.
Each of the following variables has the truth value embedded in its name
when it is used in a Boolean context.$true_num = 3 + 0.14159; $true_str = "Tried and true" $true_array[49] = "An array element"; $false_array = array(); $false_null = NULL; $false_num = 999 - 999; $false_str = ""; |
NULL:
NULL is a special type that only has one value: NULL. To give a variable the NULL value, simply assign it like this:$my_var = NULL; |
$my_var = null; |
·
It evaluates to FALSE in a Boolean context.
·
It returns FALSE when tested with IsSet()
function.
Strings:
They are sequences of characters, like "PHP supports string operations". Following are valid examples of string$string_1 = "This is a string in double quotes"; $string_2 = "This is a somewhat longer, singly quoted string"; $string_39 = "This string has thirty-nine characters"; $string_0 = ""; // a string with zero characters |
<? $variable = "name"; $literally = 'My $variable will not print!\\n'; print($literally); $literally = "My $variable will print!\\n"; print($literally); ?> |
My $variable will not print!\n My name will print |
Strings that are delimited by double quotes (as in "this") are preprocessed in both the following two ways by PHP:
·
Certain character sequences beginning with
backslash (\) are replaced with special characters
·
Variable names (starting with $) are replaced
with string representations of their values.
The escape-sequence replacements are:
·
\n is replaced by the newline character
·
\r is replaced by the carriage-return character
·
\t is replaced by the tab character
·
\$ is replaced by the dollar sign itself ($)
·
\" is replaced by a single double-quote
(")
·
\\ is replaced by a single backslash (\)
Here Document:
You can assign multiple lines to a single string variable using here document:<?php $channel =<<<_XML_ <channel> <title>What's For Dinner<title> <link>http://menu.example.com/<link> <description>Choose what to eat tonight.</description> </channel> _XML_; echo <<<END This uses the "here document" syntax to output multiple lines with variable interpolation. Note that the here document terminator must appear on a line with just a semicolon. no extra whitespace! <br /> END; print $channel; ?> |
This uses the "here document" syntax to output multiple lines with variable interpolation. Note that the here document terminator must appear on a line with just a semicolon. no extra whitespace! <channel> <title>What's For Dinner<title> <link>http://menu.example.com/<link> <description>Choose what to eat tonight.</description> |
Variable Scope:
Scope can be defined as the range of availability a variable has to the program in which it is declared. PHP variables can be one of four scope types:Variable Naming:
Rules for naming a variable is:
·
Variable names must begin with a letter or
underscore character.
·
A variable name can consist of numbers, letters,
underscores but you cannot use characters like + , - , % , ( , ) . & , etc
There is no size limit for variables.
A constant is a name or an
identifier for a simple value. A constant value cannot change during the
execution of the script. By default a constant is case-sensitiv. By convention,
constant identifiers are always uppercase. A constant name starts with a letter
or underscore, followed by any number of letters, numbers, or underscores. If
you have defined a constant, it can never be changed or undefined.
To define a constant you have to use
define() function and to retrieve the value of a constant, you have to simply
specifying its name. Unlike with variables, you do not need to have a constant
with a $. You can also use the function constant() to read a constant's value
if you wish to obtain the constant's name dynamically.
constant()
function:
As indicated by the name, this
function will return the value of the constant.
This is useful when you want to
retrieve value of a constant, but you do not know its name, i.e. It is stored
in a variable or returned by a function.
constant()
example:
<?php
define("MINSIZE", 50);
echo MINSIZE;
echo constant("MINSIZE"); // same thing as the
previous line
?>
|
Only scalar data (boolean, integer,
float and string) can be contained in constants.
Differences
between constants and variables are:
- There is no need to write a dollar sign ($) before a constant, where as in Variable one has to write a dollar sign.
- Constants cannot be defined by simple assignment, they may only be defined using the define() function.
- Constants may be defined and accessed anywhere without regard to variable scoping rules.
- Once the Constants have been set, may not be redefined or undefined.
Valid
and invalid constant names:
// Valid constant names
define("ONE",
"first thing");
define("TWO2",
"second thing");
define("THREE_3", "third thing")
// Invalid constant names
define("2TWO",
"second thing");
define("__THREE__", "third value");
|
PHP
Magic constants:
PHP provides a large number of
predefined constants to any script which it runs.
There are five magical constants
that change depending on where they are used. For example, the value of
__LINE__ depends on the line that it's used on in your script. These special
constants are case-insensitive and are as follows:
A few "magical" PHP
constants ate given below:
Name
|
Description
|
__LINE__
|
The current line number of the
file.
|
__FILE__
|
The full path and filename of the
file. If used inside an include,the name of the included file is returned.
Since PHP 4.0.2, __FILE__ always contains an absolute path whereas in
older versions it contained relative path under some circumstances.
|
__FUNCTION__
|
The function name. (Added in PHP
4.3.0) As of PHP 5 this constant returns the function name as it was declared
(case-sensitive). In PHP 4 its value is always lowercased.
|
__CLASS__
|
The class name. (Added in PHP
4.3.0) As of PHP 5 this constant returns the class name as it was declared
(case-sensitive). In PHP 4 its value is always lowercased.
|
__METHOD__
|
The class method name. (Added in
PHP 5.0.0) The method name is returned as it was declared (case-sensitive).
|
What is Operator? Simple answer can be given using expression 4 + 5 is
equal to 9. Here 4 and 5 are called operands and + is called operator. PHP
language supports following type of operators.
- Arithmetic Operators
- Comparision Operators
- Logical (or Relational) Operators
- Assignment Operators
- Conditional (or ternary) Operators
Lets have a look on all operators
one by one.
Arithmatic
Operators:
There are following arithmatic
operators supported by PHP language:
Assume variable A holds 10 and
variable B holds 20 then:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
+
|
Adds two operands
|
A + B will give 30
|
-
|
Subtracts second operand from the
first
|
A - B will give -10
|
*
|
Multiply both operands
|
A * B will give 200
|
/
|
Divide numerator by denumerator
|
B / A will give 2
|
%
|
Modulus Operator and remainder of
after an integer division
|
B % A will give 0
|
++
|
Increment operator, increases
integer value by one
|
A++ will give 11
|
--
|
Decrement operator, decreases
integer value by one
|
A-- will give 9
|
Comparison
Operators:
There are following comparison
operators supported by PHP language
Assume variable A holds 10 and
variable B holds 20 then:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
==
|
Checks if the value of two
operands are equal or not, if yes then condition becomes true.
|
(A == B) is not true.
|
!=
|
Checks if the value of two
operands are equal or not, if values are not equal then condition becomes
true.
|
(A != B) is true.
|
>
|
Checks if the value of left
operand is greater than the value of right operand, if yes then condition
becomes true.
|
(A > B) is not true.
|
<
|
Checks if the value of left operand
is less than the value of right operand, if yes then condition becomes true.
|
(A < B) is true.
|
>=
|
Checks if the value of left
operand is greater than or equal to the value of right operand, if yes then
condition becomes true.
|
(A >= B) is not true.
|
<=
|
Checks if the value of left
operand is less than or equal to the value of right operand, if yes then
condition becomes true.
|
(A <= B) is true.
|
Logical
Operators:
There are following logical
operators supported by PHP language
Assume variable A holds 10 and
variable B holds 20 then:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
and
|
Called Logical AND operator. If
both the operands are true then then condition becomes true.
|
(A and B) is true.
|
or
|
Called Logical OR Operator. If any
of the two operands are non zero then then condition becomes true.
|
(A or B) is true.
|
&&
|
Called Logical AND operator. If
both the operands are non zero then then condition becomes true.
|
(A && B) is true.
|
||
|
Called Logical OR Operator. If any
of the two operands are non zero then then condition becomes true.
|
(A || B) is true.
|
!
|
Called Logical NOT Operator. Use
to reverses the logical state of its operand. If a condition is true then
Logical NOT operator will make false.
|
!(A && B) is false.
|
Assignment
Operators:
There are following assignment
operators supported by PHP language:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
=
|
Simple assignment operator,
Assigns values from right side operands to left side operand
|
C = A + B will assigne value of A
+ B into C
|
+=
|
Add AND assignment operator, It
adds right operand to the left operand and assign the result to left operand
|
C += A is equivalent to C = C + A
|
-=
|
Subtract AND assignment operator,
It subtracts right operand from the left operand and assign the result to
left operand
|
C -= A is equivalent to C = C - A
|
*=
|
Multiply AND assignment operator,
It multiplies right operand with the left operand and assign the result to
left operand
|
C *= A is equivalent to C = C * A
|
/=
|
Divide AND assignment operator, It
divides left operand with the right operand and assign the result to left
operand
|
C /= A is equivalent to C = C / A
|
%=
|
Modulus AND assignment operator,
It takes modulus using two operands and assign the result to left operand
|
C %= A is equivalent to C = C % A
|
Conditional
Operator
There is one more operator called
conditional operator. This first evaluates an expression for a true or false
value and then execute one of the two given statements depending upon the
result of the evaluation. The conditional operator has this syntax:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
? :
|
Conditional Expression
|
If Condition is true ? Then value
X : Otherwise value Y
|
Operators
Categories:
All the operators we have discussed
above can be categorised into following categories:
- Unary prefix operators, which precede a single operand.
- Binary operators, which take two operands and perform a variety of arithmetic and logical operations.
- The conditional operator (a ternary operator), which takes three operands and evaluates either the second or third expression, depending on the evaluation of the first expression.
- Assignment operators, which assign a value to a variable.
Precedence
of PHP Operators:
Operator precedence determines the
grouping of terms in an expression. This affects how an expression is
evaluated. Certain operators have higher precedence than others; for example,
the multiplication operator has higher precedence than the addition operator:
For example x = 7 + 3 * 2; Here x is
assigned 13, not 20 because operator * has higher precedence than + so it first
get multiplied with 3*2 and then adds into 7.
Here operators with the highest
precedence appear at the top of the table, those with the lowest appear at the
bottom. Within an expression, higher precedence operators will be evaluated
first.
Category
|
Operator
|
Associativity
|
Unary
|
! ++ --
|
Right to left
|
Multiplicative
|
* / %
|
Left to right
|
Additive
|
+ -
|
Left to right
|
Relational
|
< <= > >=
|
Left to right
|
Equality
|
== !=
|
Left to right
|
Logical AND
|
&&
|
Left to right
|
Logical OR
|
||
|
Left to right
|
Conditional
|
?:
|
Right to left
|
Assignment
|
= += -= *= /= %=
|
Right to left
|
You can use conditional statements in your code to make your decisions. PHP supports following threedecision making statements:
- if...else statement - use this statement if you want to execute a set of code when a condition is true and another if the condition is not true
- elseif statement - is used with the if...else statement to execute a set of code if one of several condition are true
- switch statement - is used if you want to select one of many blocks of code to be executed, use the Switch statement. The switch statement is used to avoid long blocks of if..elseif..else code.
The If...Else Statement
If you want to execute some code if a condition is true and another code if a condition is false, use the if....else statement.Syntax
if (condition) code to be executed if condition is true;
else code to be executed if condition is false;
|
Example
The following example will output "Have a nice weekend!" if the current day is Friday, otherwise it will output "Have a nice day!":<html> <body> <?php $d=date("D"); if ($d=="Fri") echo "Have a nice weekend!";
else echo "Have a nice day!";
?> </body> </html> |
<html> <body> <?php $d=date("D"); if ($d=="Fri") {
echo "Hello!<br />";
echo "Have a nice weekend!";
echo "See you on Monday!";
}
?> </body> </html> |
The ElseIf Statement
If you want to execute some code if one of several conditions are true use the elseif statementSyntax
if (condition) code to be executed if condition is true;
elseif (condition) code to be executed if condition is true;
else code to be executed if condition is false;
|
Example
The following example will output "Have a nice weekend!" if the current day is Friday, and "Have a nice Sunday!" if the current day is Sunday. Otherwise it will output "Have a nice day!":<html> <body> <?php $d=date("D"); if ($d=="Fri") echo "Have a nice weekend!";
elseif ($d=="Sun") echo "Have a nice Sunday!";
else echo "Have a nice day!";
?> </body> </html> |
The Switch Statement
If you want to select one of many blocks of code to be executed, use the Switch statement.The switch statement is used to avoid long blocks of if..elseif..else code.
Syntax
switch (expression) { case label1: code to be executed if expression = label1;
break; case label2: code to be executed if expression = label2;
break;
default: code to be executed
if expression is different
from both label1 and label2;
} |
Example
The switch statement works in an unusual way. First it evaluates given expression then seeks a lable to match the resulting value. If a matching value is found then the code associated with the matching label will be executed or if none of the lables match then statement will will execute any specified default code.<html> <body> <?php $d=date("D"); switch ($d) { case "Mon": echo "Today is Monday";
break;
case "Tue": echo "Today is Tuesday";
break;
case "Wed": echo "Today is Wednesday";
break;
case "Thu": echo "Today is Thursday";
break;
case "Fri": echo "Today is Friday";
break;
case "Sat": echo "Today is Saturday";
break;
case "Sun": echo "Today is Sunday";
break;
default: echo "Wonder which day is this ?";
} ?> </body> </html> |
- for - loops through a block of code a specified number of times.
- while - loops through a block of code if and as long as a specified condition is true.
- do...while - loops through a block of code once, and then repeats the loop as long as a special condition is true.
- foreach - loops through a block of code for each element in an array.
The for loop statement
The for statement is used when you know how many times you want to execute a statement or a block of statements.Syntax
for (initialization; condition; increment) { code to be executed;
} |
Example
The following example makes five iterations and changes the assigned value of two variables on each pass of the loop:<html> <body> <?php $a = 0; $b = 0; for( $i=0; $i<5; $i++ ) { $a += 10;
$b += 5;
} echo ("At the end of the loop a=$a and b=$b" ); ?> </body> </html> |
At the end of the loop a=50 and b=25 |
The while loop statement
The while statement will execute a block of code if and as long as a test expression is true.If the test expression is true then the code block will be executed. After the code has executed the test expression will again be evaluated and the loop will continue until the test expression is found to be false.
Syntax
while (condition) { code to be executed;
} |
Example
This example decrements a variable value on each iteration of the loop and the counter increments until it reaches 10 when the evaluation is false and the loop ends.<html> <body> <?php $i = 0; $num = 50; while( $i < 10) { $num--;
$i++;
} echo ("Loop stopped at i = $i and num = $num" ); ?> </body> </html> |
Loop stopped at i = 10 and num = 40 |
The do...while loop statement
The do...while statement will execute a block of code at least once - it then will repeat the loop as long as a condition is true.
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Syntax
do { code to be executed;
}while (condition); |
Example
The following example will increment the value of i at least once, and it will continue incrementing the variable i as long as it has a value of less than 10:<html> <body> <?php $i = 0; $num = 0; do { $i++;
}while( $i < 10 ); echo ("Loop stopped at i = $i" ); ?> </body> </html> |
Loop stopped at i = 10 |
The foreach loop statement
The foreach statement is used to loop through arrays. For each pass the value of the current array element is assigned to $value and the array pointer is moved by one and in the next pass next element will be processed.
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Syntax
foreach (array as value) { code to be executed;
} |
Example
Try out following example to list out the values of an array.<html> <body> <?php $array = array( 1, 2, 3, 4, 5); foreach( $array as $value ) { echo "Value is $value <br />";
} ?> </body> </html> |
Value is 1 Value is 2 Value is 3 Value is 4 Value is 5 |
The break statement
The PHP break keyword is used to terminate the execution of a loop prematurely.The break statement is situated inside the statement block. If gives you full control and whenever you want to exit from the loop you can come out. After coming out of a loop immediate statement to the loop will be executed.
Example
In the following example condition test becomes true when the counter value reaches 3 and loop terminates.<html> <body> <?php $i = 0; while( $i < 10) { $i++;
if( $i == 3 )break;
} echo ("Loop stopped at i = $i" ); ?> </body> </html> |
Loop stopped at i = 3 |
The continue statement
The PHP continue keyword is used to halt the current iteration of a loop but it does not terminate the loop.Just like the break statement the continue statement is situated inside the statement block containing the code that the loop executes, preceded by a conditional test. For the pass encountering continue statement, rest of the loop code is skipped and next pass starts.
Example
In the following example loop prints the value of array but for which condition becomes true it just skip the code and next value is printed.<html> <body> <?php $array = array( 1, 2, 3, 4, 5); foreach( $array as $value ) { if( $value == 3 )continue;
echo "Value is $value <br />";
} ?> </body> </html> |
Value is 1 Value is 2 Value is 4 Value is 5 |
There are three different kind of arrays and each array value is accessed using an ID c which is called array index.
- Numeric array - An array with a numeric index. Values are stored and accessed in linear fashion
- Associative array - An array with strings as index. This stores element values in association with key values rather than in a strict linear index order.
- Multidimensional array - An array containing one or more arrays and values are accessed using multiple indices
Numeric Array
These arrays can store numbers, strings and any object but their index will be prepresented by numbers. By default array index starts from zero.Example
Following is the example showing how to create and access numeric arrays.Here we have used array() function to create array. This function is explained in function reference.
<html> <body> <?php /* First method to create array. */ $numbers = array( 1, 2, 3, 4, 5); foreach( $numbers as $value ) { echo "Value is $value <br />";
} /* Second method to create array. */ $numbers[0] = "one"; $numbers[1] = "two"; $numbers[2] = "three"; $numbers[3] = "four"; $numbers[4] = "five"; foreach( $numbers as $value ) { echo "Value is $value <br />";
} ?> </body> </html> |
Value is 1 Value is 2 Value is 3 Value is 4 Value is 5 Value is one Value is two Value is three Value is four Value is five |
Associative Arrays
The associative arrays are very similar to numeric arrays in term of functionality but they are different in terms of their index. Associative array will have their index as string so that you can establish a strong association between key and values.To store the salaries of employees in an array, a numerically indexed array would not be the best choice. Instead, we could use the employees names as the keys in our associative array, and the value would be their respective salary.
NOTE: Don't keep associative array inside double quote while printing otheriwse it would not return any value.
Example
<html> <body> <?php /* First method to associate create array. */ $salaries = array( "mohammad" => 2000, "qadir" => 1000, "zara" => 500 ); echo "Salary of mohammad is ". $salaries['mohammad'] . "<br />"; echo "Salary of qadir is ". $salaries['qadir']. "<br />";
echo "Salary of zara is ". $salaries['zara']. "<br />";
/* Second method to create array. */ $salaries['mohammad'] = "high"; $salaries['qadir'] = "medium"; $salaries['zara'] = "low"; echo "Salary of mohammad is ". $salaries['mohammad'] . "<br />"; echo "Salary of qadir is ". $salaries['qadir']. "<br />";
echo "Salary of zara is ". $salaries['zara']. "<br />";
?> </body> </html> |
Salary of mohammad is 2000 Salary of qadir is 1000 Salary of zara is 500 Salary of mohammad is high Salary of qadir is medium Salary of zara is low |
Multidimensional Arrays
A multi-dimensional array each element in the main array can also be an array. And each element in the sub-array can be an array, and so on. Values in the multi-dimensional array are accessed using multiple index.Example
In this example we create a two dimensional array to store marks of three students in three subjects:This example is an associative array, you can create numeric array in the same fashion.
<html> <body> <?php $marks = array(
"mohammad" => array
(
"physics" => 35, "maths" => 30, "chemistry" => 39 ),
"qadir" => array
(
"physics" => 30,
"maths" => 32,
"chemistry" => 29
),
"zara" => array
(
"physics" => 31, "maths" => 22,
"chemistry" => 39
)
); /* Accessing multi-dimensional array values */
echo "Marks for mohammad in physics : " ;
echo $marks['mohammad']['physics'] . "<br />";
echo "Marks for qadir in maths : ";
echo $marks['qadir']['maths'] . "<br />";
echo "Marks for zara in chemistry : " ;
echo $marks['zara']['chemistry'] . "<br />";
?> </body> </html> |
Marks for mohammad in physics : 35 Marks for qadir in maths : 32 Marks for zara in chemistry : 39 |
They are sequences of characters,
like "PHP supports string operations".
NOTE: Built-in string functions is given in function reference PHP String Functions
Following are valid examples of
string
$string_1 = "This is a string in double quotes";
$string_2 = "This is a somewhat longer, singly quoted
string";
$string_39 = "This string has thirty-nine
characters";
$string_0 = ""; // a string with zero characters
|
Singly quoted strings are treated
almost literally, whereas doubly quoted strings replace variables with their
values as well as specially interpreting certain character sequences.
<?
$variable = "name";
$literally = 'My $variable will not print!\\n';
print($literally);
$literally = "My $variable will print!\\n";
print($literally);
?>
|
This will produce following result:
My $variable will not print!\n
My name will print
|
There are no artificial limits on
string length - within the bounds of available memory, you ought to be able to
make arbitrarily long strings.
Strings that are delimited by double
quotes (as in "this") are preprocessed in both the following two ways
by PHP:
- Certain character sequences beginning with backslash (\) are replaced with special characters
- Variable names (starting with $) are replaced with string representations of their values.
The escape-sequence replacements
are:
- \n is replaced by the newline character
- \r is replaced by the carriage-return character
- \t is replaced by the tab character
- \$ is replaced by the dollar sign itself ($)
- \" is replaced by a single double-quote (")
- \\ is replaced by a single backslash (\)
String
Concatenation Operator
To concatenate two string variables
together, use the dot (.) operator:
<?php
$string1="Hello World";
$string2="1234";
echo $string1 . " " . $string2;
?>
|
This will produce following result:
Hello World 1234
|
If we look at the code above you see
that we used the concatenation operator two times. This is because we had to
insert a third string.
Between the two string variables we
added a string with a single character, an empty space, to separate the two
variables.
Using
the strlen() function
The strlen() function is used to
find the length of a string.
Let's find the length of our string
"Hello world!":
<?php
echo strlen("Hello world!");
?>
|
This will produce following result:
12
|
The length of a string is often used
in loops or other functions, when it is important to know when the string ends.
(i.e. in a loop, we would want to stop the loop after the last character in the
string)
Using
the strpos() function
The strpos() function is used to
search for a string or character within a string.
If a match is found in the string,
this function will return the position of the first match. If no match is
found, it will return FALSE.
Let's see if we can find the string
"world" in our string:
<?php
echo strpos("Hello world!","world");
?>
|
This will produce following result:
6
|
As you see the position of the
string "world" in our string is position 6. The reason that it is 6,
and not 7, is that the first position in the string is 0, and not 1.
This session demonstrates how PHP
can provide dynamic content according to browser type, randomly generated
numbers or User Input. It also demonstrated how the client borwser can be
redirected.
Identifying
Browser & Platform
PHP creates some useful environment
variables that can be seen in the phpinfo.php page that was used to setup
the PHP environment.
One of the environemnt variables set
by PHP is HTTP_USER_AGENT which identifies the user's browser and
operating system.
PHP provides a function getenv() to
access the value of all the environment variables. The information contained in
the HTTP_USER_AGENT environment variable can be used to create dynamic content
appropriate to the borwser.
Following example demonstrates how
you can identify a client borwser and operating system.
NOTE: The function preg_match()is discussed in PHP Regular
expression session.
<html>
<body>
<?php
$viewer = getenv(
"HTTP_USER_AGENT" );
$browser =
"An unidentified browser";
if( preg_match(
"/MSIE/i", "$viewer" ) )
{
$browser =
"Internet Explorer";
}
else if( preg_match( "/Netscape/i",
"$viewer" ) )
{
$browser =
"Netscape";
}
else if( preg_match( "/Mozilla/i",
"$viewer" ) )
{
$browser =
"Mozilla";
}
$platform =
"An unidentified OS!";
if( preg_match(
"/Windows/i", "$viewer" ) )
{
$platform =
"Windows!";
}
else if (
preg_match( "/Linux/i", "$viewer" ) )
{
$platform =
"Linux!";
}
echo("You
are using $browser on $platform");
?>
</body>
</html>
|
This is producing following result
on my machine. This result may be different for your computer depnding on what
you are using.
You are using Mozilla! on Windows!
|
Display
Images Randomly
The PHP rand() function is
used to generate a random number.i This function can generate numbers with-in a
given range. The random number generator should be seeded to prevent a regular
pattern of numbers being generated. This is achieved using the srand()
function that specifiies the seed number as its argument.
Following example demonstrates how
you can display different image each time out of four images:
<html>
<body>
<?php
srand( microtime()
* 1000000 );
$num = rand( 1, 4
);
switch( $num )
{
case 1:
$image_file = "/home/images/alfa.jpg";
break;
case 2:
$image_file = "/home/images/ferrari.jpg";
break;
case 3:
$image_file = "/home/images/jaguar.jpg";
break;
case 4:
$image_file = "/home/images/porsche.jpg";
break;
}
echo "Random
Image : <img src=$image_file />";
?>
</body>
</html>
|
Using
HTML Forms
The most important thing to notice
when dealing with HTML forms and PHP is that any form element in an HTML page
will automatically be available to your PHP scripts.
Try out following example by putting
the source code in test.php script.
<?php
if(
$_POST["name"] || $_POST["age"] )
{
echo
"Welcome ". $_POST['name']. "<br />";
echo "You
are ". $_POST['age']. " years old.";
exit();
}
?>
<html>
<body>
<form
action="<?php $_PHP_SELF ?>"
method="POST">
Name: <input
type="text" name="name" />
Age: <input
type="text" name="age" />
<input
type="submit" />
</form>
</body>
</html>
|
- The PHP default variable $_PHP_SELF is used for the PHP script name and when you click "submit" button then same PHP script will be called and will produce following result:
- The method = "POST" is used to post user data to the server script. There are two methods of posting data to the server script which are discussed in PHP GET & POST chapter.
Browser
Redirection
The PHP header() function
supplies raw HTTP headers to the browser and can be used to redirect it to
another location. The redirection script should be at the very top of the page
to prevent any other part of the page from loading.
The target is specified by the Location:
header as the argument to the header() function. After calling this
function the exit() function can be used to halt parsing of rest of the
code.
Following example demonstrates how
you can redirect a borwser request to another web page. Try out this example by
puttingthe source code in test.php script.
<?php
if(
$_POST["location"] )
{
$location =
$_POST["location"];
header(
"Location:$location" );
exit();
}
?>
<html>
<body>
<p>Choose a
site to visit :</p>
<form
action="<?php $_PHP_SELF ?>"
method="POST">
<select
name="location">
<option
value="http://w3c.org">
World
Wise Web Consortium
</option>
<option
value="http://www.google.com">
Google
Search Page
</option>
</select>
<input
type="submit" />
</form>
</body>
</html>
|
Displaying
"File Download" Dialog Box
Sometime it is desired that you want
to give option where a use will click a link and it will pop up a "File
Download" box to the user in stead of displaying actual content. This is
very easy and will be achived through HTTP header.
The HTTP header will be different
from the actual header where we send Content-Type as text/html\n\n.
In this case content type will be application/octet-stream and actual
file name will be concatenated alongwith it.
For example,if you want make a FileName
file downloadable from a given link then its syntax will be as follows.
#!/usr/bin/perl
# HTTP Header
print "Content-Type:application/octet-stream;
name=\"FileName\"\r\n";
print "Content-Disposition: attachment;
filename=\"FileName\"\r\n\n";
# Actual File Content
open( FILE, "<FileName" );
while(read(FILE, $buffer, 100) )
{
print("$buffer");
}
|
There are two ways the browser
client can send information to the web server.
- The GET Method
- The POST Method
Before the browser sends the
information, it encodes it using a scheme called URL encoding. In this scheme,
name/value pairs are joined with equal signs and different pairs are separated
by the ampersand.
name1=value1&name2=value2&name3=value3
|
Spaces are removed and replaced with
the + character and any other nonalphanumeric characters are replaced
with a hexadecimal values. After the information is encoded it is sent to the
server.
The
GET Method
The GET method sends the encoded
user information appended to the page request. The page and the encoded
information are separated by the ? character.
http://www.test.com/index.htm?name1=value1&name2=value2
|
- The GET method produces a long string that appears in your server logs, in the browser's Location: box.
- The GET method is restricted to send upto 1024 characters only.
- Never use GET method if you have password or other sensitive information to be sent to the server.
- GET can't be used to send binary data, like images or word documents, to the server.
- The data sent by GET method can be accessed using QUERY_STRING environment variable.
- The PHP provides $_GET associative array to access all the sent information using GET method.
Try out following example by putting
the source code in test.php script.
<?php
if(
$_GET["name"] || $_GET["age"] )
{
echo
"Welcome ". $_GET['name']. "<br />";
echo "You
are ". $_GET['age']. " years old.";
exit();
}
?>
<html>
<body>
<form
action="<?php $_PHP_SELF ?>"
method="GET">
Name: <input
type="text" name="name" />
Age: <input
type="text" name="age" />
<input
type="submit" />
</form>
</body>
</html>
|
The
POST Method
The POST method transfers information
via HTTP headers. The information is encoded as described in case of GET method
and put into a header called QUERY_STRING.
- The POST method does not have any restriction on data size to be sent.
- The POST method can be used to send ASCII as well as binary data.
- The data sent by POST method goes through HTTP header so security depends on HTTP protocol. By using Secure HTTP you can make sure that your information is secure.
- The PHP provides $_POST associative array to access all the sent information using GET method.
Try out following example by putting
the source code in test.php script.
<?php
if(
$_POST["name"] || $_POST["age"] )
{
echo
"Welcome ". $_POST['name']. "<br />";
echo "You
are ". $_POST['age']. " years old.";
exit();
}
?>
<html>
<body>
<form
action="<?php $_PHP_SELF ?>"
method="POST">
Name: <input
type="text" name="name" />
Age: <input
type="text" name="age" />
<input
type="submit" />
</form>
</body>
</html>
|
The
$_REQUEST variable
The PHP $_REQUEST variable contains
the contents of both $_GET, $_POST, and $_COOKIE. We will discuss $_COOKIE
variable when we will explain about cookies.
The PHP $_REQUEST variable can be
used to get the result from form data sent with both the GET and POST methods.
Try out following example by putting
the source code in test.php script.
<?php
if(
$_REQUEST["name"] || $_REQUEST["age"] )
{
echo
"Welcome ". $_REQUEST['name']. "<br />";
echo "You
are ". $_REQUEST['age']. " years old.";
exit();
}
?>
<html>
<body>
<form
action="<?php $_PHP_SELF ?>"
method="POST">
Name: <input
type="text" name="name" />
Age: <input
type="text" name="age" />
<input
type="submit" />
</form>
</body>
</html>
|
Here $_PHP_SELF variable contains
the name of self script in which it is being called.
You can include the content of a PHP
file into another PHP file before the server executes it. There are two PHP
functions which can be used to included one PHP file into another PHP file.
- The include() Function
- The require() Function
This is a strong point of PHP which
helps in creating functions, headers, footers, or elements that can be reused
on multiple pages. This will help developers to make it easy to change the layout
of complete website with minimal effort. If there is any change required then
instead of changing thousand of files just change included file.
The
include() Function
The include() function takes all the
text in a specified file and copies it into the file that uses the include
function. If there is any problem in loading a file then the include()
function generates a warning but the script will continue execution.
Assume you want to create a common
menu for your website. Then create a file menu.php with the following content.
<a
href="http://www.tutorialspoint.com/index.htm">Home</a> -
<a
href="http://www.tutorialspoint.com/ebxml">ebXML</a> -
<a
href="http://www.tutorialspoint.com/ajax">AJAX</a> -
<a
href="http://www.tutorialspoint.com/perl">PERL</a> <br
/>
|
Now create as many pages as you like
and include this file to create header. For example now your test.php file can
have following content.
<html>
<body>
<?php include("menu.php"); ?>
<p>This is an example to show how to include PHP
file!</p>
</body>
</html>
|
This will produce following result
This is an example to show how to
include PHP file. You can include mean.php file in as many as files you like!
|
The
require() Function
The require() function takes all the
text in a specified file and copies it into the file that uses the include
function. If there is any problem in loading a file then the require()
function generates a fatal error and halt the execution of the script.
So there is no difference in
require() and include() except they handle error conditions. It is recommended
to use the require() function instead of include(), because scripts should not
continue executing if files are missing or misnamed.
You can try using above example with
require() function and it will generate same result. But if you will try
following two examples where file does not exist then you will get different
results.
<html>
<body>
<?php include("xxmenu.php"); ?>
<p>This is an example to show how to include wrong
PHP file!</p>
</body>
</html>
|
This will produce following result
This is an example to show how to include wrong PHP file!
|
Now lets try same example with
require() function.
<html>
<body>
<?php require("xxmenu.php"); ?>
<p>This is an example to show how to include wrong
PHP file!</p>
</body>
</html>
|
This time file execution halts and
nothing is displayed.
NOTE: You may get plain warning messages or fatal error messages
or nothing at all. This depends on your PHP Server configuration.
This chapter will explain following
functions related to files:
- Opening a file
- Reading a file
- Writing a file
- Closing a file
Opening
and Closing Files
The PHP fopen() function is
used to open a file. It requires two arguments stating first the file name and
then mode in which to operate.
Files modes can be specified as one
of the six options in this table.
Mode
|
Purpose
|
r
|
Opens the file for reading only.
Places the file pointer at the beginning of the file. |
r+
|
Opens the file for reading and
writing.
Places the file pointer at the beginning of the file. |
w
|
Opens the file for writing only.
Places the file pointer at the beginning of the file. and truncates the file to zero length. If files does not exist then it attemts to create a file. |
w+
|
Opens the file for reading and
writing only.
Places the file pointer at the beginning of the file. and truncates the file to zero length. If files does not exist then it attemts to create a file. |
a
|
Opens the file for writing only.
Places the file pointer at the end of the file. If files does not exist then it attemts to create a file. |
a+
|
Opens the file for reading and
writing only.
Places the file pointer at the end of the file. If files does not exist then it attemts to create a file. |
If an attempt to open a file fails
then fopen returns a value of false otherwise it returns a file
pointer which is used for further reading or writing to that file.
After making a changes to the opened
file it is important to close it with the fclose() function. The fclose()
function requires a file pointer as its argument and then returns true
when the closure succeeds or false if it fails.
Reading
a file
Once a file is opened using fopen()
function it can be read with a function called fread(). This function
requires two arguments. These must be the file pointer and the length of the
file expressed in bytes.
The files's length can be found
using the filesize() function which takes the file name as its argument
and returns the size of the file expressed in bytes.
So here are the steps required to
read a file with PHP.
- Open a file using fopen() function.
- Get the file's length using filesize() function.
- Read the file's content using fread() function.
- Close the file with fclose() function.
The following example assigns the
content of a text file to a variable then displays those contents on the web
page.
<html>
<head>
<title>Reading a file using PHP</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
$filename = "/home/user/guest/tmp.txt";
$file = fopen( $filename, "r" );
if( $file == false )
{
echo (
"Error in opening file" );
exit();
}
$filesize = filesize( $filename );
$filetext = fread( $file, $filesize );
fclose( $file );
echo ( "File size : $filesize bytes" );
echo ( "<pre>$filetext</pre>" );
?>
</body>
</html>
|
Writing
a file
A new file can be written or text
can be appended to an existing file using the PHP fwrite() function.
This function requires two arguments specifying a file pointer and the
string of data that is to be written. Optionally a third integer argument can
be included to specify the length of the data to write. If the third argument
is included, writing would will stop after the specified length has been
reached.
The following example creates a new
text file then writes a short text heading insite it. After closing this file
its existence is confirmed using file_exist() function which takes file
name as an argument
<?php
$filename = "/home/user/guest/newfile.txt";
$file = fopen( $filename, "w" );
if( $file == false )
{
echo (
"Error in opening new file" );
exit();
}
fwrite( $file, "This is a simple test\n" );
fclose( $file );
?>
<html>
<head>
<title>Writing a file using PHP</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
if( file_exist( $filename ) )
{
$filesize =
filesize( $filename );
$msg =
"File created with name $filename
";
$msg .=
"containing $filesize bytes";
echo ($msg );
}
else
{
echo ("File
$filename does not exit" );
}
?>
</body>
</html>
|
PHP functions are similar to other
programming languages. A function is a piece of code which takes one more input
in the form of parameter and does some processing and returns a value.
You already have seen many functions
like fopen() and fread() etc. They are built-in functions but PHP
gives you option to create your own functions as well.
There are two parts which should be
clear to you:
- Creating a PHP Function
- Calling a PHP Function
In fact you hardly need to create
your own PHP function because there are already more than 1000 of built-in
library functions created for different area and you just need to call them
according to your requirement.
Please refer to PHP
Function Reference for a complete set of useful functions.
Creating
PHP Function:
Its very easy to create your own PHP
function. Suppose you want to create a PHP function which will simply write a simple
message on your browser when you will call it. Following example creates a
function called writeMessage() and then calls it just after creating it.
Note that while creating a function
its name should start with keyword function and all the PHP code should
be put inside { and } braces as shown in the following example below:
<html>
<head>
<title>Writing PHP Function</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
/* Defining a PHP Function */
function
writeMessage()
{
echo "You are
really a nice person, Have a nice time!";
}
/* Calling a PHP Function */
writeMessage();
?>
</body>
</html>
|
This will display following result:
You are really a nice person, Have a nice time!
|
PHP
Functions with Parameters:
PHP gives you option to pass your
parameters inside a function. You can pass as many as parameters your like.
These parameters work like variables inside your function. Following example
takes two integer parameters and add them together and then print them.
<html>
<head>
<title>Writing PHP Function with
Parameters</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
function
addFunction($num1, $num2)
{
$sum = $num1 +
$num2;
echo "Sum of
the two numbers is : $sum";
}
addFunction(10, 20);
?>
</body>
</html>
|
This will display following result:
Sum of the two numbers is : 30
|
Passing
Arguments by Reference:
It is possible to pass arguments to
functions by reference. This means that a reference to the variable is
manipulated by the function rather than a copy of the variable's value.
Any changes made to an argument in
these cases will change the value of the original variable. You can pass an
argument by reference by adding an ampersand to the variable name in either the
function call or the function definition.
Following example depicts both the
cases.
<html>
<head>
<title>Passing Argument by Reference</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
function
addFive($num)
{
$num += 5;
}
function addSix(&$num)
{
$num += 6;
}
$orignum = 10;
addFive( &$orignum );
echo "Original Value is $orignum<br />";
addSix( $orignum );
echo "Original Value is $orignum<br />";
?>
</body>
</html>
|
This will display following result:
Original Value is 15
Original Value is 21
|
PHP
Functions retruning value:
A function can return a value using
the return statement in conjunction with a value or object. return stops
the execution of the function and sends the value back to the calling code.
You can return more than one value
from a function using return array(1,2,3,4).
Following example takes two integer
parameters and add them together and then returns their sum to the calling
program. Note that return keyword is used to return a value from a
function.
<html>
<head>
<title>Writing PHP Function which returns
value</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
function
addFunction($num1, $num2)
{
$sum = $num1 +
$num2;
return
$sum;
}
$return_value = addFunction(10, 20);
echo "Returned value from the function :
$return_value
?>
</body>
</html>
|
This will display following result:
Returned value from the function : 30
|
Setting
Default Values for Function Parameters:
You can set a parameter to have a
default value if the function's caller doesn't pass it.
Following function prints NULL in
case use does not pass any value to this function.
<html>
<head>
<title>Writing PHP Function which returns
value</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
function
printMe($param = NULL)
{
print $param;
}
printMe("This is test");
printMe();
?>
</body>
</html>
|
This will produce following result:
This is test
|
Dynamic
Function Calls:
It is possible to assign function
names as strings to variables and then treat these variables exactly as you
would the function name itself. Following example depicts this behaviour.
<html>
<head>
<title>Dynamic Function Calls</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
function
sayHello()
{
echo
"Hello<br />";
}
$function_holder = "sayHello";
$function_holder();
?>
</body>
</html>
|
This will display following result:
Hello
|
Cookies are text files stored on the
client computer and they are kept of use tracking purpose. PHP transparently
supports HTTP cookies.
There are three steps involved in
identifying returning users:
- Server script sends a set of cookies to the browser. For example name, age, or identification number etc.
- Browser stores this information on local machine for future use.
- When next time browser sends any request to web server then it sends those cookies information to the server and server uses that information to identify the user.
This chapter will teach you how to
set cookies, how to access them and how to delete them.
The
Anatomy of a Cookie:
Cookies are usually set in an HTTP
header (although JavaScript can also set a cookie directly on a browser). A PHP
script that sets a cookie might send headers that look something like this:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Fri, 04 Feb 2000 21:03:38 GMT
Server: Apache/1.3.9 (UNIX) PHP/4.0b3
Set-Cookie: name=xyz; expires=Friday, 04-Feb-07 22:03:38
GMT;
path=/; domain=tutorialspoint.com
Connection: close
Content-Type: text/html
|
As you can see, the Set-Cookie
header contains a name value pair, a GMT date, a path and a domain. The name
and value will be URL encoded. The expires field is an instruction to the
browser to "forget" the cookie after the given time and date.
If the browser is configured to
store cookies, it will then keep this information until the expiry date. If the
user points the browser at any page that matches the path and domain of the
cookie, it will resend the cookie to the server.The browser's headers might
look something like this:
GET / HTTP/1.0
Connection: Keep-Alive
User-Agent: Mozilla/4.6 (X11; I; Linux 2.2.6-15apmac ppc)
Host: zink.demon.co.uk:1126
Accept: image/gif, */*
Accept-Encoding: gzip
Accept-Language: en
Accept-Charset: iso-8859-1,*,utf-8
Cookie: name=xyz
|
A PHP script will then have access
to the cookie in the environmental variables $_COOKIE or $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS[]
which holds all cookie names and values. Above cookie can be accessed using
$HTTP_COOKIE_VARS["name"].
Setting
Cookies with PHP:
PHP provided setcookie()
function to set a cookie. This function requires upto six arguments and should
be called before <html> tag. For each cookie this function has to be
called separately.
setcookie(name, value, expire, path, domain, security);
|
Here is the detail of all the
arguments:
- Name - This sets the name of the cookie and is stored in an environment variable called HTTP_COOKIE_VARS. This variable is used while accessing cookies.
- Value -This sets the value of the named variable and is the content that you actually want to store.
- Expiry - This specify a future time in seconds since 00:00:00 GMT on 1st Jan 1970. After this time cookie will become inaccessible. If this parameter is not set then cookie will automatically expire when the Web Browser is closed.
- Path -This specifies the directories for which the cookie is valid. A single forward slash character permits the cookie to be valid for all directories.
- Domain - This can be used to specify the domain name in very large domains and must contain at least two periods to be valid. All cookies are only valid for the host and domain which created them.
- Security - This can be set to 1 to specify that the cookie should only be sent by secure transmission using HTTPS otherwise set to 0 which mean cookie can be sent by regular HTTP.
Following example will create two
cookies name and age these cookies will be expired after one
hour.
<?php
setcookie("name", "John Watkin", time()+3600,
"/","", 0);
setcookie("age", "36", time()+3600, "/",
"", 0);
?>
<html>
<head>
<title>Setting Cookies with PHP</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php echo "Set Cookies"?>
</body>
</html>
|
Accessing
Cookies with PHP
PHP provides many ways to access
cookies.Simplest way is to use either $_COOKIE or $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS variables.
Following example will access all the cookies set in above example.
<html>
<head>
<title>Accessing Cookies with PHP</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
echo $_COOKIE["name"]. "<br />";
/* is equivalent to */
echo $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS["name"]. "<br
/>";
echo $_COOKIE["age"] . "<br />";
/* is equivalent to */
echo $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS["name"] . "<br
/>";
?>
</body>
</html>
|
You can use isset() function
to check if a cookie is set or not.
<html>
<head>
<title>Accessing Cookies with PHP</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
if(
isset($_COOKIE["name"]))
echo
"Welcome " . $_COOKIE["name"] . "<br />";
else
echo
"Sorry... Not recognized" . "<br />";
?>
</body>
</html>
|
Deleting
Cookie with PHP
Officially, to delete a cookie you
should call setcookie() with the name argument only but this does not always
work well, however, and should not be relied on.
It is safest to set the cookie with
a date that has already expired:
<?php
setcookie(
"name", "", time()- 60, "/","", 0);
setcookie(
"age", "", time()- 60, "/","", 0);
?>
<html>
<head>
<title>Deleting Cookies with PHP</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php echo "Deleted Cookies" ?>
</body>
</html>
|
An alternative way to make data
accessible across the various pages of an entire website is to use a PHP
Session.
A session creates a file in a
temporary directory on the server where registered session variables and their
values are stored. This data will be available to all pages on the site during
that visit.
The location of the temporary file
is determined by a setting in the php.ini file called session.save_path.
Bore using any session variable make sure you have setup this path.
When a session is started following
things happen:
- PHP first creates a unique identifier for that particular session which is a random string of 32 hexadecimal numbers such as 3c7foj34c3jj973hjkop2fc937e3443.
- A cookie called PHPSESSID is automatically sent to the user's computer to store unique session identification string.
- A file is automatically created on the server in the designated temporary directory and bears the name of the unique identifier prefixed by sess_ ie sess_3c7foj34c3jj973hjkop2fc937e3443.
When a PHP script wants to retrieve
the value from a session variable, PHP automatically gets the unique session
identifier string from the PHPSESSID cookie and then looks in its temporary
directory for the file bearing that name and a validation can be done by
comparing both values.
A session ends when the user loses
the browser or after leaving the site, the server will terminate the session
after a predetermined period of time, commonly 30 minutes duration.
Starting
a PHP Session:
A PHP session is easily started by
making a call to the session_start() function.This function first checks
if a session is already started and if none is started then it starts one. It
is recommended to put the call to session_start() at the beginning of
the page.
Session variables are stored in
associative array called $_SESSION[]. These variables can be accessed
during lifetime of a session.
The following example starts a
session then register a variable called counter that is incremented each
time the page is visited during the session.
Make use of isset() function
to check if session variable is already set or not.
Put this code in a test.php file and
load this file many times to see the result:
<?php
session_start();
if( isset(
$_SESSION['counter'] ) )
{
$_SESSION['counter'] += 1;
}
else
{
$_SESSION['counter'] = 1;
}
$msg = "You
have visited this page ". $_SESSION['counter'];
$msg .= "in
this session.";
?>
<html>
<head>
<title>Setting up a PHP session</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php echo (
$msg ); ?>
</body>
</html>
|
Destroying
a PHP Session:
A PHP session can be destroyed by session_destroy()
function. This function does not need any argument and a single call can
destroy all the session variables. If you want to destroy a single session
variable then you can use unset() function to unset a session variable.
Here is the example to unset a
single variable:
<?php
unset($_SESSION['counter']);
?>
|
Here is the call which will destroy
all the session variables:
<?php
session_destroy();
?>
|
Turning
on Auto Session:
You don't need to call
start_session() function to start a session when a user visits your site if you
can set session.auto_start variable to 1 in php.ini file.
Sessions
without cookies:
There may be a case when a user does
not allow to store cookies on their machine. So there is another method to send
session ID to the browser.
Alternatively, you can use the
constant SID which is defined if the session started. If the client did not
send an appropriate session cookie, it has the form session_name=session_id.
Otherwise, it expands to an empty string. Thus, you can embed it
unconditionally into URLs.
The following example demonstrates
how to register a variable, and how to link correctly to another page using
SID.
<?php
session_start();
if
(isset($_SESSION['counter'])) {
$_SESSION['counter'] = 1;
} else {
$_SESSION['counter']++;
}
?>
$msg = "You
have visited this page ".
$_SESSION['counter'];
$msg .= "in
this session.";
echo ( $msg );
<p>
To continue click
following link <br />
<a
href="nextpage.php?<?php echo htmlspecialchars(SID);
>">
</p>
|
The htmlspecialchars() may be
used when printing the SID in order to prevent XSS related attacks.
PHP must be configured correctly in
the php.ini file with the details of how your system sends email. Open
php.ini file available in /etc/ directory and find the section headed [mail
function].
Windows users should ensure that two
directives are supplied. The first is called SMTP that defines your email
server address. The second is called sendmail_from which defines your own email
address.
The configuration for Windows should
look something like this:
[mail function]
; For Win32 only.
SMTP = smtp.secureserver.net
; For win32 only
sendmail_from = webmaster@tutorialspoint.com
|
Linux users simply need to let PHP
know the location of their sendmail application. The path and any
desired switches should be specified to the sendmail_path directive.
The configuration for Linux should
look something like this:
[mail function]
; For Win32 only.
SMTP =
; For win32 only
sendmail_from =
; For Unix only
sendmail_path = /usr/sbin/sendmail -t -i
|
Now you are ready to go:
Sending
plain text email:
PHP makes use of mail() function
to send an email. This function requires three mandatory arguments that specify
the recipient's email address, the subject of the the message and the actual
message additionally there are other two optional parameters.
mail( to, subject, message, headers, parameters );
|
Here is the description for each
parameters.
Parameter
|
Description
|
to
|
Required. Specifies the receiver /
receivers of the email
|
subject
|
Required. Specifies the subject of
the email. This parameter cannot contain any newline characters
|
message
|
Required. Defines the message to
be sent. Each line should be separated with a LF (\n). Lines should not
exceed 70 characters
|
headers
|
Optional. Specifies additional
headers, like From, Cc, and Bcc. The additional headers should be separated
with a CRLF (\r\n)
|
parameters
|
Optional. Specifies an additional
parameter to the sendmail program
|
As soon as the mail function is
called PHP will attempt to send the email then it will return true if
successful or false if it is failed.
Multiple recipients can be specified
as the first argument to the mail() function in a comma separated list.
Example:
Following example will send an HTML
email message to xyz@somedomain.com. You can code this program in such a way
that it should receive all content from the user and then it should send an
email.
<html>
<head>
<title>Sending email using PHP</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
$to =
"xyz@somedomain.com";
$subject =
"This is subject";
$message =
"This is simple text message.";
$header =
"From:abc@somedomain.com \r\n";
$retval = mail
($to,$subject,$message,$header);
if( $retval ==
true )
{
echo
"Message sent successfully...";
}
else
{
echo
"Message could not be sent...";
}
?>
</body>
</html>
|
Sending
HTML email:
When you send a text message using
PHP then all the content will be treated as simple text. Even if you will
include HTML tags in a text message, it will be displayed as simple text and
HTML tags will not be formatted according to HTML syntax. But PHP provides
option to send an HTML message as actual HTML message.
While sending an email message you
can specify a Mime version, content type and character set to send an HTML
email.
Example:
Following example will send an HTML
email message to xyz@somedomain.com copying it to afgh@somedomain.com. You can
code this program in such a way that it should recieve all content from the
user and then it should send an email.
<html>
<head>
<title>Sending HTML email using PHP</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
$to =
"xyz@somedomain.com";
$subject =
"This is subject";
$message =
"<b>This is HTML message.</b>";
$message .=
"<h1>This is headline.</h1>";
$header =
"From:abc@somedomain.com \r\n";
$header =
"Cc:afgh@somedomain.com \r\n";
$header .=
"MIME-Version: 1.0\r\n";
$header .=
"Content-type: text/html\r\n";
$retval = mail
($to,$subject,$message,$header);
if( $retval ==
true )
{
echo
"Message sent successfully...";
}
else
{
echo
"Message could not be sent...";
}
?>
</body>
</html>
|
Sending
attachments with email:
To send an email with mixed content
requires to set Content-type header to multipart/mixed. Then text
and attachment sections can be specified within boundaries.
A boundary is started with two
hyphens followed by a unique number which can not appear in the message part of
the email. A PHP function md5() is used to create a 32 digit hexadecimal
number to create unique number. A final boundary denoting the email's final
section must also end with two hyphens.
Attached files should be encoded
with the base64_encode() function for safer transmission and are best
split into chunks with the chunk_split() function. This adds \r\n
inside the file at regular intervals, normally every 76 characters.
Following is the example which will
send a file /tmp/test.txt as an attachment. you can code your program to
receive an uploaded file and send it.
<html>
<head>
<title>Sending attachment using PHP</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php
$to =
"xyz@somedomain.com";
$subject =
"This is subject";
$message =
"This is test message.";
# Open a file
$file = fopen(
"/tmp/test.txt", "r" );
if( $file == false
)
{
echo
"Error in opening file";
exit();
}
# Read the file
into a variable
$size =
filesize("/tmp/test.txt");
$content = fread(
$file, $size);
# encode the data
for safe transit
# and insert \r\n
after every 76 chars.
$encoded_content =
chunk_split( base64_encode($content));
# Get a random 32
bit number using time() as seed.
$num = md5( time()
);
# Define the main
headers.
$header =
"From:xyz@somedomain.com\r\n";
$header .=
"MIME-Version: 1.0\r\n";
$header .=
"Content-Type: multipart/mixed; ";
$header .=
"boundary=$num\r\n";
$header .=
"--$num\r\n";
# Define the
message section
$header .=
"Content-Type: text/plain\r\n";
$header .=
"Content-Transfer-Encoding:8bit\r\n\n";
$header .=
"$message\r\n";
$header .=
"--$num\r\n";
# Define the
attachment section
$header .=
"Content-Type: multipart/mixed;
";
$header .=
"name=\"test.txt\"\r\n";
$header .=
"Content-Transfer-Encoding:base64\r\n";
$header .=
"Content-Disposition:attachment; ";
$header .=
"filename=\"test.txt\"\r\n\n";
$header .=
"$encoded_content\r\n";
$header .=
"--$num--";
# Send email now
$retval = mail (
$to, $subject, "", $header );
if( $retval ==
true )
{
echo
"Message sent successfully...";
}
else
{
echo
"Message could not be sent...";
}
?>
</body>
</html>
|
You try all the above examples. If
you face any problem then you can post that problem in discussion forum.
A PHP script can be used with a HTML
form to allow users to upload files to the server. Initially files are uploaded
into a temporary directory and then relocated to a target destination by a PHP
script.
Information in the phpinfo.php
page describes the temporary directory that is used for file uploads as upload_tmp_dir
and the maximum permitted size of files that can be uploaded is stated as upload_max_filesize.
These parameters are set into PHP configuration file php.ini
The process of uploading a file
follows these steps
- The user opens the page containing a HTML form featuring a text files, a browse button and a submit button.
- The user clicks the browse button and selects a file to upload from the local PC.
- The full path to the selected file appears in the text filed then the user clicks the submit button.
- The selected file is sent to the temporary directory on the server.
- The PHP script that was specified as the form handler in the form's action attribute checks that the file has arrived and then copies the file into an intended directory.
- The PHP script confirms the success to the user.
As usual when writing files it is
necessary for both temporary and final locations to have permissions set that
enable file writing. If either is set to be read-only then process will fail.
An uploaded file could be a text
file or image file or any document.
Creating
an upload form:
The following HTM code below creates
an uploader form. This form is having method attribute set to post and
enctype attribute is set to multipart/form-data
<html>
<head>
<title>File Uploading Form</title>
</head>
<body>
<h3>File Upload:</h3>
Select a file to upload: <br />
<form action="/php/file_uploader.php"
method="post"
enctype="multipart/form-data">
<input type="file" name="file"
size="50" />
<br />
<input type="submit" value="Upload
File" />
</form>
</body>
</html>
|
This will display following result:
File Upload:
Select a file to upload:
NOTE: This is just dummy form and would not work.
|
Creating
an upload script:
There is one global PHP variable
called $_FILES. This variable is an associate double dimension array and
keeps all the information related to uploaded file. So if the value assigned to
the input's name attribute in uploading form was file, then PHP would
create following five variables:
- $_FILES['file']['tmp_name']- the uploaded file in the temporary directory on the web server.
- $_FILES['file']['name'] - the actual name of the uploaded file.
- $_FILES['file']['size'] - the size in bytes of the uploaded file.
- $_FILES['file']['type'] - the MIME type of the uploaded file.
- $_FILES['file']['error'] - the error code associated with this file upload.
The following example below attempts
to copy a file uploaded by the HTML Form listed in previous section page to /var/www/html
directory which is document root of your PHP server and it will display
all the file's detail upon completion. Please note that if you are going to
display uploaded file then don't try with binary files like images or word
document.
Here is the code of uploader.php
script which will take care of uploading a file.
<?php
if( $_FILES['file']['name'] != "" )
{
copy(
$_FILES['file']['name'], "/var/www/html" ) or
die(
"Could not copy file!");
}
else
{
die("No
file specified!");
}
?>
<html>
<head>
<title>Uploading Complete</title>
</head>
<body>
<h2>Uploaded File Info:</h2>
<ul>
<li>Sent file: <?php echo
$_FILES['file']['name']; ?>
<li>File size: <?php echo
$_FILES['file']['size']; ?> bytes
<li>File type: <?php echo
$_FILES['file']['type']; ?>
</ul>
</body>
</html>
|
When you will upload a file using
upload form and upload script, it will display following result:
Uploaded File Info:
·
Sent file: uploadedfile.txt
·
File size: 2003
bytes
·
File type: image/jpg
|
You try out above example yourself
on your webserver. If you have any problem then post it to Discussion Forums to
get any further help.
Every company follows a different
coding standard based on their best practices. Coding standard is required
because there may be many developers working on different modules so if they
will start inventing their own standards then source will become very
un-manageable and it will become difficult to maintain that source code in
future.
Here are several reasons why to use
coding specifications:
- Your peer programmers have to understand the code you produce. A coding standard acts as the blueprint for all the team to decipher the code.
- Simplicity and clarity achieved by consistent coding saves you from common mistakes.
- If you revise your code after some time then it becomes easy to understand that code.
- Its industry standard to follow a particular standard to being more quality in software.
There are few guidelines which can
be followed while coding in PHP.
- Indenting and Line Length - Use an indent of 4 spaces and don't use any tab because different computers use different setting for tab. It is recommended to keep lines at approximately 75-85 characters long for better code readability.
- Control Structures - These include if, for, while, switch, etc. Control statements should have one space between the control keyword and opening parenthesis, to distinguish them from function calls. You are strongly encouraged to always use curly braces even in situations where they are technically optional.
Examples:
if ((condition1) || (condition2)) {
action1;
} elseif ((condition3) && (condition4)) {
action2;
} else {
default action;
}
|
You can
writ eswitch statements as follows:
switch (condition) {
case 1:
action1;
break;
case 2:
action2;
break;
default:
defaultaction;
break;
}
|
- Function Calls - Functions should be called with no spaces between the function name, the opening parenthesis, and the first parameter; spaces between commas and each parameter, and no space between the last parameter, the closing parenthesis, and the semicolon. Here's an example:
$var = foo($bar, $baz, $quux);
|
- Function Definitions - Function declarations follow the "BSD/Allman style":
function fooFunction($arg1, $arg2 = '')
{
if (condition) {
statement;
}
return $val;
}
|
- Comments - C style comments (/* */) and standard C++ comments (//) are both fine. Use of Perl/shell style comments (#) is discouraged.
- PHP Code Tags - Always use <?php ?> to delimit PHP code, not the <? ?> shorthand. This is required for PHP compliance and is also the most portable way to include PHP code on differing operating systems and setups.
- Variable Names -
- Use all lower case letters
- Use '_' as the word separator.
- Global variables should be prepended with a 'g'.
- Global constants should be all caps with '_' separators.
- Static variables may be prepended with 's'.
- Make Functions Reentrant - Functions should not keep static variables that prevent a function from being reentrant.
- Alignment of Declaration Blocks - Block of declarations should be aligned.
- One Statement Per Line - There should be only one statement per line unless the statements are very closely related.
- Short Methods or Functions - Methods should limit themselves to a single page of code.
There could be many more points
which should be considered while writing your PHP program. Over all intension
should be to be consistent throughout of the code programming and it will be
possible only when you will follow any coding standard. YOu can device your own
standard if you like something different.
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