Send me her number and I'll ask ;)
On 14-04-29 10:32 AM, Marc Guay wrote:
I can't help but wonder what Leia thinks of all this.
On 29 April 2014 10:09, Shawn McKenzie <shawn@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Also, they cannot be called using variable functions. Notice however that
though echo doesn't return a value, print does.
On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 7:46 AM, Kumar Saurabh Sinha <
sinha.ksaurabh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Difference between Language Construct & Functions:
*Language Constructs*
Constructs are elements that are built-into the language and, therefore,
follow special
rules. Perhaps the most common of them is the echo statement, which allows
you to write data to the script’s output:
echo 10; // will output 10
It’s important to understand that echo is not a function and, as such, it
does not have
a return value. If you need to output data through a function, you can use
print()
instead:
echo 10;print (10);
Another very important construct is die(), which is itself an alias of
exit(). It allows
you to terminate the script’s output and either output a string or return a
numeric
status to the process that called the script.
Thanks & Regards
*Kumar Saurabh Sinha*
+91-9971047719 | +91-8595436700
On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 6:03 PM, Tedd Sperling <tedd@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Apr 28, 2014, at 3:32 PM, Robert Cummings <robert@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On 14-04-28 03:30 PM, Robert Cummings wrote:
They should push the use of echo over print since it's a language
construct and not a function thus it benefits from no function
overhead.
Cheers,
Rob.
I'd like to retract this comment :) Apparent print is not a function.
Didn't it used to be?
Cheers,
Rob.
--
Nope, you can't retract it. :-)
As for "print" being a function or construct, I dunno -- what's the
difference?
Cheers,
tedd
_______________
tedd sperling
tedd@xxxxxxxxxxxx
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