PHP/Basic Code
From r00tedvw.com wiki
(Difference between revisions)
Line 59: | Line 59: | ||
;!= | ;!= | ||
:Not equal to | :Not equal to | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==If/Else== | ||
+ | example: | ||
+ | <nowiki> | ||
+ | <?php | ||
+ | if (this condition is true) { | ||
+ | // do this code | ||
+ | } | ||
+ | else { | ||
+ | // do this code instead | ||
+ | } | ||
+ | ?> | ||
+ | </nowiki> |
Revision as of 19:53, 27 December 2015
Contents |
Basics
- .php
- all PHP pages end with the .php extension, this tells the browser there is php code in the file.
- //
- comments in PHP are defined with a double-forward slash "//"
- unlike most other comments which have delimiters both before and after comments, PHP does not, the "//" is defined at the beginning of the comment and the rest of the line is then included as part of the comment.
delimiters - start & stop
- <?php
- all php code begins with this.
- ?>
- all php code ends with this
output text
- echo
- just like with scripting, echo can be used to output text
ie. <p> <?php echo "My first line of PHP!"; ?> </p>
Arithmetic
php is capable of doing basic arithmetic, take the following for example using "echo"
<?php echo 17 * 123; ?> Outputs: 2091
Operators
concatenation
- joins strings together
<?php echo "Hello," . " " . "world" . "!"; ?> ---- Outputs: Hello, world!
Each string above is defined between double quotes. The "dots" are between them and combine them together to form 1 long string.
Variables
Variables in php are stored the same way as bash scripting, the variable name being defined by starting with a "$"
ie. <?php $myName = "r00tedvw"; echo $myName; ?>
Comparisons
- >
- Greater than
- <
- Less than
- <=
- Less than or equal to
- >=
- Greater than or equal to
- ==
Equal to
- !=
- Not equal to
If/Else
example:
<?php if (this condition is true) { // do this code } else { // do this code instead } ?>