Jumat, 26 November 2010

print (PHP 4, PHP 5)

Print

(PHP 4, PHP 5)

print — Output a string
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Description
int print ( string $arg )

Outputs arg.

print() is not actually a real function (it is a language construct) so you are not required to use parentheses with its argument list.
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Parameters

arg

The input data.

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Return Values

Returns 1, always.
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Examples

Example #1 print() examples
print("Hello World");

print "print() also works without parentheses.";

print "This spans
multiple lines. The newlines will be
output as well";

print "This spans\nmultiple lines. The newlines will be\noutput as well.";

print "escaping characters is done \"Like this\".";

// You can use variables inside of a print statement
$foo = "foobar";
$bar = "barbaz";

print "foo is $foo"; // foo is foobar

// You can also use arrays
$bar = array("value" => "foo");

print "this is {$bar['value']} !"; // this is foo !

// Using single quotes will print the variable name, not the value
print 'foo is $foo'; // foo is $foo

// If you are not using any other characters, you can just print variables
print $foo; // foobar

print <<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;
?>
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Notes

Note: Because this is a language construct and not a function, it cannot be called using variable functions

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See Also

* echo() - Output one or more strings
* printf() - Output a formatted string
* flush() - Flush the output buffer
* Heredoc syntax



printf>
add a note add a note User Contributed Notes
print
sdaau
22-Dec-2009 10:28
Printing an empty string from PHP, as in

print "";

returns a single byte (content length=1) - the line-feed character '\n' (0a).

So if you truly want to return an empty string, you may want to use "flush()" instead - then headers without any Content-length will be returned.

Do note, however, that regardless of whether print or flush is used, accessing such a PHP output from AJAX (via .responseText) will always have a '\n' as a value for an "empty" string sent from PHP.
Chris Watson
01-Oct-2009 08:20
mvpetrovich of 2007 could just use single quotes as his string delimiters (see the example in the current documentation).
It's not ALWAYS appropriate, but generally it is best (the Zend Framework coding standards have a good take on this). It yields a number of interesting benefits:
1: Nobody will be tempted to write functions to replace backticks or other characters with double quotes. Such functions may cause a (negligible) loss of efficiency, and maybe other undesired effects.
2: You will be able to use double quotes without escaping. This is recommended (although not required) for HTML and XML attributes, as well as quoted text.
3: The script will hit the browser very slightly slightly faster since PHP doesn't have to scan through the string looking for variables, escaped characters, curly braces or other things.
4: Your code gets ten times easier to read. (as mvpetrovich pointed out)

If, in spite of these four excellent benefits, you really MUST still use double quotes to delimit boring old string constants (and seriously, why would you?), you could use the slightly less favourable single quotes as delimiters for most markup languages.
HTML served as HTML will even let you lay out unquoted attributes (yuck).

It should also be noted though that if you are just printing bare strings, you may as well shut off the php parser. The quickest way to send a string is to write it as plain text, OUTSIDE of the php tags. This will also make your code look excellent in a lot of syntax highlighters.

There are few disadvantages to doing this, if any. Output buffering still works. All your classes and objects and includes remain in place. Your script runs faster. World peace is obtained.
http://www.danielxmorris.com
28-Aug-2008 02:46
An update to the println function I wrote below, this is a more efficient, correct and returns a value (1, always; (print)).


function println($string_message = '') {
return isset($_SERVER['SERVER_PROTOCOL']) ? print "$string_message
" . PHP_EOL:
print $string_message . PHP_EOL;
}

?>
user at example dot net
25-Aug-2008 04:47
Be careful when using print. Since print is a language construct and not a function, the parentheses around the argument is not required.
In fact, using parentheses can cause confusion with the syntax of a function and SHOULD be omited.

Most would expect the following behavior:
if (print("foo") && print("bar")) {
// "foo" and "bar" have been printed
}
?>

But since the parenthesis around the argument are not required, they are interpretet as part of the argument.
This means that the argument of the first print is

("foo") && print("bar")

and the argument of the second print is just

("bar")

For the expected behavior of the first example, you need to write:
if ((print "foo") && (print "bar")) {
// "foo" and "bar" have been printed
}
?>
user at example dot net
25-Aug-2008 04:45
Be careful when using print. Since print is a language construct and not a function, the parentheses around the argument is not required.
In fact, using parentheses can cause confusion with the syntax of a function and SHOULD be omited.

Most would expect the following behavior:
if (print("foo") && print("bar")) {
// "foo" and "bar" had been printed
}
?>

But since the parenthesis around the argument are not required, they are interpretet as part of the argument.
This means that the argument of the first print is

("foo") && print("bar")

and the argument of the second print is just

("bar")

For the expected behavior of the first example, you need to write:
if ((print "foo") && (print "bar")) {
// "foo" and "bar" had been printed
}
?>
danielxmorris @ gmail dotcom
16-May-2008 11:08
I wrote a println function that determines whether a \n or a
should be appended to the line depending on whether it's being executed in a shell or a browser window. People have probably thought of this before but I thought I'd post it anyway - it may help a couple of people.

function println ($string_message) {
$_SERVER['SERVER_PROTOCOL'] ? print "$string_message
" : print "$string_message\n";
}
?>

Examples:

Running in a browser:


Output: Hello, world!


Running in a shell:


Output: Hello, world!\n
jon
01-Jun-2007 02:19
the FAQTs article can be found archived at http://web.archive.org/web/20060601063513/http
://www.faqts.com/knowledge_base/view.phtml/aid/1/fid/40

(url split to get past the line-length limitation)
mvpetrovich
30-Mar-2007 07:02
I grew quite tired of backslashes, and wrote these routines. It uses the back single quote as a substitute for double quotes within a statement. It made my code much more readable. It is a little easier than using a "here document." I also found I make a few less typing errors.


function qq($text) {return str_replace('`','"',$text); }
function printq($text) { print qq($text); }
function printqn($text) { print qq($text)."\n"; }

//example - before

echo "My Link\n";

//becomes - with printqn function

printqn("My Link");

?>
floppie at quadra-tec dot net
15-Nov-2006 05:09
At the top of your page, do something to this effect:
$n = "\n";
$t = "\t";
?>

Then, if you need your table cell four tabs in:

whatever' . $n); ?>

This means the parser only has to interpret four characters inside double quotes, then just stores them in variables. With strings that small, concatenating six things together won't be slow at all.
vincent at bevort dot com
21-May-2006 07:36
Sometime there is no choice in using a single or double quote
ie when using special chars to format the output to make the HTML more readable you have to use the Double qoutes. Single quotes make PHP fotmat the '\n' as text
phpnet at i3x171um dot com
21-May-2006 02:41
I have written a script to benchmark the several methods of outputting data in PHP: via single quotes, double quotes, heredoc, and printf. The script constructs a paragraph of text with each method. It performs this construction 10,000 times, then records how long it took. In total, it prints 160,000 times and records 16 timings. Here are the raw results.

Outputted straight to browser--

Single quotes: 2,813 ms
...with concatenation: 1,179 ms
Double quotes: 5,180 ms
...with concatenation: 3,937 ms
heredoc: 7,300 ms
...with concatenation: 6,288 ms
printf: 9,527 ms
...with concatenation: 8,564 ms

Outputted to the output buffer--

Single quotes: 8 ms
...with concatenation: 38 ms
Double quotes: 8 ms
...with concatenation: 47 ms
heredoc: 17 ms
...with concatenation: 49 ms
printf: 54 ms
...with concatenation: 52 ms

A nice graph of the script's output can be found here:
http://i3x171um.com/output_benchmarks/ob.gif

So what should you choose to print your text? I found several things out writing this.

First, it should be noted that the print and echo keywords are interchangeable, performance-wise. The timings show that one is probably an alias for the other. So use whichever you feel most comfortable with.

Second, if you've ever wondered which was better, the definitive answer is single quotes. Single quotes are at least four times faster in any situation. Double quotes, while more convenient, do pose a debatably significant performance issue when outputting massive amounts of data.

Third, stay away from heredoc, and absolutely stay away from [s]printf. They're slow, and the alternatives are there.

The source of my script can be found here:
http://i3x171um.com/output_benchmarks/ob.txt

DO NOT RUN THE SCRIPT ON THE INTERNET! Run it instead from localhost. The script outputs ~45 megabytes of text in an html comment at the top of the page by default. Expect the benchmark to take ~45 seconds. If this is too long, you can change the amount of iterations to a lower number (the results scale accurately down to about 1,000 iterations).
g8z at yahoo dot com
14-Mar-2006 07:16
I wanted to print a file on a Windows 2003 server from PHP, and found the "print" function instead. Just in case some other users are trying to physically print to a printer, rather than print to the screen, here's a function to do it.

This function will print a single file of one of these types: pdf, doc, xls, rtf, or plain text. If you have the full .exe path, you can print other document types, too. The shell_exec function is not enabled in safe mode.

Courtesy of Darren's Script Archive: http://www.tufat.com


function print_file($filename)
{
// path to your adobe executable
$adobe_path='"C:/Program Files/Adobe/Acrobat 7.0/Reader/AcroRd32.exe"';

$ext='';
$ext=strrchr($filename,'.');
$ext=substr($ext,1);
$ext_xl=substr($ext,0,2);

if ($ext=='pdf') {
shell_exec ($adobe_path.' /t '.$filename);
}
else if ($ext=='doc'||$ext=='rtf'||$ext=='txt') {
$word = new COM("Word.Application");
$word->visible = true;
$word->Documents->Open($filename);
$word->ActiveDocument->PrintOut();
$word->ActiveDocument->Close();
$word->Quit();
}
else if ($ext_xl=='xl') {
$excel = new COM("Excel.Application");
$excel->visible = true;
$excel->Workbooks->Open($filename);
$excel->ActiveWorkBook->PrintOut();
$excel->ActiveWorkBook->Close();
$excel->Quit();
}
}

// example of printing a PDF

print_file("C:/photo_gallery.pdf");

?>
jon at tap dot net
05-Dec-2005 09:48
I have a small utility run from the command line that processes a potentially huge list of files. As it can take hours to complete, I stuck a

print '.';

statement in the body of the main loop to prove that something was happening.

For reasons unknown to me, the utiliity suddenly started buffering the output such that it printed nothing until completion, defeating the purpose of the running monitor. Adding flush() statements did nothing. The problem was solved by using

fputs(STDOUT, '.');

but I have no idea why.
james-web at and dot org
25-Jul-2005 10:47
Note that if you want to dump the value of a variable, you want to use print_r(), var_dump() or var_export().
ejallison at gmail dot com
16-Jul-2005 10:10
This is a simple function for printing debug comments that I didn't think of for a long time. Maybe it'll serve you good too.


function printd($str) {
if ($debug) { echo $str; }
}

// ...

if ($valueCalculatedEarlierInTheScript == 3) {
doSomethingWithNoOutput();
printd("doSomethingWithNoOutput() has executed.");
}

?>

It's mostly just to make sure everything is running without having to go through everything and put in echo "Step #whatever has executed" whenever something mysterious isn't working.
gem at rellim dot com
05-Nov-2004 09:28
HERE Documents can reference arrays as long as you enclose
the vars in {}.

Like this:


$line = array( 'title' => "Hello", 'date' => 'Today');

echo <<Title: {$line['title']}
Date: {$line['date']}
EOT;

?>

Run this and get
Title: Hello
Date: Today

More info here, scroll down to "heredoc syntax":
http://www.php.net/manual/en/language.types.string.php
rjl at xs4all dot nl
16-Jan-2004 12:08
To elaborate on above example adding an
array variable
$text = <<This uses the "here document" syntax to output
multiple lines with $variable interpolation. Note
that the here document terminator must appear on a
line with just a semicolon no extra whitespace!
User = {$_REQUEST['user']}
END;

'print $text;' Will output the string. Very handy for storing HTML.
Or adding {} around the array will allow you to use
above mentioned html blocks in conjuction with forms.

Rene =<>=


Source : http://php.net/manual/en/function.print.php

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