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Constants in PHP_PHP Tutorial

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A constant is an identifier (name) of a simple value. As the name implies, the value cannot change during script execution (except for so-called magic constants, which are not constants). Constants are case-sensitive by default. By convention constant identifiers are always uppercase.

Constant names follow the same naming rules as any other PHP tag. Legal constant names begin with a letter or an underscore, followed by any letters, numbers, or underscores. The regular expression is expressed like this: [a-zA-Z_x7f-xff][a-zA-Z0-9_x7f-xff]*

Note: Here, the letters are a-z , A-Z, and ASCII characters from 127 to 255 (0x7f-0xff).

Like superglobals, the scope of constants is global. Constants can be accessed anywhere in the script regardless of scope. For more information about functions please read the Variable Scope manual.

Syntax
You can use the define() function to define constants. Once a constant is defined, it cannot be changed or undefined.

Constants can only contain scalar data (boolean, integer, float and string).

You can get the value of a constant simply by specifying its name. Do not add the $ sign in front of the constant. If the constant name is dynamic, you can also use the function constant() to read the value of the constant. Use get_defined_constants() to get a list of all defined constants.

Note: Constants and (global) variables are in different namespaces. This means for example TRUE and $TRUE are different.

If an undefined constant is used, PHP assumes that you want the name of the constant itself, as if you were calling it with a string (CONSTANT corresponds to "CONSTANT"). An E_NOTICE level error will be issued. See the manual for why $foo[bar] is wrong (unless you define bar as a constant with define() beforehand). If you just want to check whether a certain constant is defined, use the defined() function.

Constants are different from variables:

There is no dollar sign ($) in front of constants;

Constants can only be defined with the define() function, not through assignment statements;

Constants can be defined and accessed anywhere regardless of the rules of variable scope;

Once defined, a constant cannot be redefined or undefined;

The value of a constant can only be scalar.

Defined constants

<?phpdefine("CONSTANT", "Hello world.");echo CONSTANT; // outputs "Hello world."echo Constant; // outputs "Constant" and issues a notice.?>

Predefined constants

PHP provides a lot of predefined constants to any script it runs. Define constants. However, many constants are defined by different extension libraries and will only appear when these extension libraries are loaded, either dynamically loaded or included at compile time.

There are four magic constants that change depending on where they are used. For example, the value of __LINE__ depends on the line it is in the script. These special constants are not case-sensitive, as follows:

Several PHP "magic constants"

__LINE__ The current line number in the file.

__FILE__ The full path and file name of the file.

__FUNCTION__ function name (this is newly added in PHP 4.3.0).

__CLASS__ The name of the class (newly added in PHP 4.3.0).

__METHOD__ The method name of the class (this is newly added in PHP 5.0.0).



www.bkjia.comtruehttp: //www.bkjia.com/PHPjc/446735.htmlTechArticleA constant is an identifier (name) of a simple value. As the name implies, the value cannot change during script execution (except for so-called magic constants, which are not constants). ...
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