Something that really would like to know but never found out are shortcuts in PHP.
I am currently coding a function with a foreach
loop with just a single statement inside. I tried to omit the curly braces as you can do in if/else control structures and it works. No errors.
foreach($var as $value)
$arr[] = $value;
Now I tried to use it the same way but putting an if/else block inside it. Again, working and no errors.
foreach($var as $value)
if(1 + 1 == 2) {
$arr[] = $value;
};
Then, I thought like "why is this working?" and omitted the closing semicolon. Still working. So I tried to use the if/else statement without curly braces inside the foreach loop and again, still working and no errors. But is the foreach loop really closed/ended right now?
foreach($var as $value)
if(1 + 1 == 2)
$arr[] = $value;
At least I omitted the closing semicolon again and (as expected) a parsing error occurred.
So my big question is: When can I omit the curly braces and in which structure/loop/function? I know that I can definitely do so in if
and else
. But what about while
, for
and foreach
?
And yes, I know that it is not safe, smart, whatever to code without curly braces and there are shorthands like $condition ? true : false;
and if: doSomething(); endif;
, endfor;
and endforeach;
. I don't wanna learn about shorthands I just want to understand the conditions about when and where it is possible to omit the curly brackets.
struct
and class
in C and C++.
When you omit the braces it will only treat the next statement as body of the condition.
if ($x) echo 'foo';
is the same as
if ($x) { echo 'foo'; }
but remember that
if ($x)
echo 'foo';
echo 'bar';
will always print "bar"
Internally it's the other way around: if
will only look at the next expression, but PHP treats everything in {}
as a single "grouped" expression.
Same for the other control statements (foreach
, and so on)
There are places where you can, but you never should.
Explicit is always better than implicit.
Who knows when you're going to have to go back and modify old code. It's so easy to miss that stuff and there's nothing gained by doing it.
It will work fine if you only have one argument inside!. But if you want to omit curly brace you can use colon and end. example:
if(a < 1 ) :
echo "a is less than 1";
else :
echo "a is greater than 1";
endif;
As have said you don't wanna learn about shorthand's and accepted answer gives good example about omitting curly braces
, but there is something to add. As you can see it's fine to omit curly braces
in case of if ($x) echo 'foo';
. There is nothing wrong with code, no performance or other issues and it is readable by other developers. And example also shows you that if you write
if ($x)
echo 'foo';
echo 'bar';
instead of
if ($x)
echo 'foo';
echo 'bar';
You can run into unwanted results where bar
is printed while you don't want it to be printed and if your code is full of such statements then it will make it harder for you to read your own code and even more harder for others to read it.
I don't wanna learn about shorthand's I just want to understand the conditions about when and where it is possible to omit the curly brackets.
These things are closely related so if you really want to understand where it is possible to omit curly brackets then that should be a must that you understand or are at least aware of shorthand's , have read
PHP Control Structures The PHP ternary conditional operators and expressions in general
So my big question is: When can I omit the curly braces and in which structure/loop/function?
The curly brace is not required however, for readability and maintenance, many developers would consider it bad style not to include them. Previous 2 links should give you information needed to make your own decisions when you could omit curly brace. for example there is nothing wrong with following code snippets which all do exactly same thing.
With curly brace
if (PHP_VERSION_ID < 70000)
{
print "PHP >= 7.0 required yours is ";
print phpversion();
print "\n";
exit(1);
}
Is same as
if (PHP_VERSION_ID < 70000) :
print "PHP >= 7.0 required yours is ";
print phpversion();
print "\n";
exit(1);
endif;
Or you can use the dot operator
if (PHP_VERSION_ID < 80000)
(print "PHP >= 7.0 required yours is ") . (print phpversion()) . (print "\n") . exit(1);
And you can make use of the ternary conditional operator and even omit if
it self besides omitting curly braces
(PHP_VERSION_ID > 70000) ?: (print "PHP >= 7.0 required yours is ") . (print phpversion()) . (print "\n") . exit(1);
Since we only print we can shorten that and strip some print string functions
which were here to represent more than one function in statement without curly braces
(PHP_VERSION_ID > 70000) ?: (print "PHP >= 7.0 required yours is " . phpversion() . "\n") . exit(1);
As from php 7 we can use Null coalescing operator
(PHP_VERSION_ID > 70000) ?: null ?? (print "PHP >= 7.0 required yours is ".phpversion() . "\n") . exit(1);
As one can see that there is many ways you can get exactly the same result. That not only applies for this if
example but same can be practiced with structure/loop/function
. So there is no one answer for your big question. One should consider mainly following.
Is the code you are writing easy to maintain. Can you answer for your self is there something you win by omitting curly braces.
$I_want_value = $if_im_not_null_use_me ?? $if_first_is_null_use_me ?? $if_second_is_null_use_me;
So You can have as many alternatives as you which if previous variable is NULL; PHP 7 New-features
I omit curly braces in my PHP templates. E.g. you can use loops as follows:
<ul>
<?php foreach ($var as $value): ?>
<li><?php echo $value; ?></li>
<?php endforeach; ?>
</ul>
You can use it for simple things like:
if($a === true) continue;
But for some more complicated sub-conditions it may cause you problems:
$a = false;
$b = false;
if ($a === true)
if ($b === true)
echo 1;
else
echo 2;
With the code above, you would expect to see "2" as output, but you won't.
To complement @Marko's answer, be aware that when using the dot operator for this matter, you should enclose each operation in parentheses, otherwise it will reverse the order.
For instance, this code below will print PHP >= 7.0 required yours is 5.6.15
.
(print "PHP >= 7.0 required yours is ") . (print phpversion()) . (print "\n");
While this will print 5.6.151PHP >= 7.0 required yours is 1
.
print("PHP >= 7.0 required yours is ") . print(phpversion()) . print("\n");
You can also use the and
operator for this to work. Like so:
if (PHP_VERSION_ID < 70000)
print("PHP >= 7.0 required yours is ") and
print(phpversion()) and
print("\n");
For single line statements.
If you tried to do
foreach($array as $x => $y)
$do_something = $x;
$do_something_else = $y;
Unless I am mistaken the php interpreter will take the second line under the foreach statement as being outside of the implied braces
Due to the indentation if you came back to this code at a later date, or another developer looked at your work it would be confusing.
As such it is generally wise to always use braces with these statements. It will save later headache/confusion
It's possible when you have only one expression after your clause/
For example,
foreach($var as $value)
if(1 + 1 == 2) {
$arr[] = $value;
};
is correct, but
foreach($var as $value)
$somevar = $var;
if(1 + 1 == 2) {
$arr[] = $value;
};
is not, and php interpreter will think that if
statement is outside foreach
The answer is easy. This is the same in C/C++.
if, if/else, if/else if/ else and loops => If the next statement is one single line, you can omit the curly braces.
Ex:
for($i= 0; $i<=100; $i++)
{
if($i % 7 == 0)
{
echo $i . "<br>";
}
}
It can also be written in this way:
for($i= 0; $i<=100; $i++) if($i % 7 == 0) echo $i . "<br>";
When can I omit the curly braces and in which structure/loop/function? I know that I can definitely do so in if and else. But what about while, for and foreach?
For If/else it is possible to have single and multiple statements without curly braces by using the following construct:
<?php
if ($x):
echo 'foo';
echo 'bar';
else:
echo 'nofoo';
echo 'nobar';
endif;
?>
As described in this answer
For while, for and foreach, only single statements are allowed without curly brackets
<?php
foreach($array as $x => $y)
$do_something = $x;
?>
PHP shorthand expression was available since PHP 5.3
$condition ? $value_if_true : $value_if_false
$a ? $b : ( $c ? $d : ( $e ? $f : $g ) )
Success story sharing
do{}while($X);
, or `switch´.for
,while
,foreach
andif
. Also it is like this for every language with a C-like syntax. Do note @tkone's answer, about how it is Good Practice to always use braces.