hi,

On 5/5/05, Jon M. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Oops!! What I meant was:
> 
> JavaScript:
> 
> var varName;
> 
> PHP:
> 
> var $varName;
> 
> I can't believe I did that (I have been writing JavaScript for a few years,
> and know better -I gotta get more sleep).
> 
> So, are you saying that it is absolutely "PHP-illegal" to do:
> 
> var $varName;
> 
> in PHP??? Would it be ignored? Or would it screw up the interpreter?

Yes. I checked for var $i = 1; it throwed parse error. so i think you cannot do.

> 
> "Rasmus Lerdorf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Jon M. wrote:
> >> I know in JavaScript, that you declare vars like so:
> >>
> >> var = variableName;
> >>
> >> So I'm assuming that in PHP you do it like this:
> >>
> >> var = $variableName;
> >>
> >> But there doesn't seem to be a single shred of documentation on PHP.net
> >> (or
> >> in ANY book) that covers this. All they say is that it's good practice,
> >> but
> >> not necessary. Then they always skip telling you how.
> >>
> >> I always like to declare vars since it helps me keep track of the vars I
> >> will be using, and I just like to do things right.
> >>
> >> So am I right about how you do it? "Yes", "No", example please??
> >
> > No
> >
> > You don't declare variables in PHP.  You just start using them.
> >
> > Perhaps you mean assign?  Since your example of
> >
> >  var = variableName;
> >
> > is actually an assignment in Javascript.
> >
> > In PHP you simply do:
> >
> > $one_var = $another_var;
> >
> > -Rasmus
> 

-- 
bala> balachandar muruganantham
blog> lynx http://chandar.blogspot.com
web> http://www.chennaishopping.com

--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to