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PHP 7 Programming Cookbook

You're reading from   PHP 7 Programming Cookbook Over 80 recipes that will take your PHP 7 web development skills to the next level!

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785883446
Length 610 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Doug Bierer Doug Bierer
Author Profile Icon Doug Bierer
Doug Bierer
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Foundation FREE CHAPTER 2. Using PHP 7 High Performance Features 3. Working with PHP Functional Programming 4. Working with PHP Object-Oriented Programming 5. Interacting with a Database 6. Building Scalable Websites 7. Accessing Web Services 8. Working with Date/Time and International Aspects 9. Developing Middleware 10. Looking at Advanced Algorithms 11. Implementing Software Design Patterns 12. Improving Web Security 13. Best Practices, Testing, and Debugging A. Defining PSR-7 Classes Index

Understanding differences in parsing

In PHP 5, expressions on the right side of an assignment operation were parsed right-to-left. In PHP 7, parsing is consistently left-to-right.

How to do it...

  1. A variable-variable is a way of indirectly referencing a value. In the following example, first $$foo is interpreted as ${$bar}. The final return value is thus the value of $bar instead of the direct value of $foo (which would be bar):
    $foo = 'bar';
    $bar = 'baz';
    echo $$foo; // returns  'baz'; 
  2. In the next example we have a variable-variable $$foo, which references a multi-dimensional array with a bar key and a baz sub-key:
    $foo = 'bar';
    $bar = ['bar' => ['baz' => 'bat']];
    // returns 'bat'
    echo $$foo['bar']['baz'];
  3. In PHP 5, parsing occurs right-to-left, which means the PHP engine would be looking for an $foo array, with a bar key and a baz. sub-key The return value of the element would then be interpreted...
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