Tuesday, September 14, 2010

PHP quoted strings

In PHP, I've been wondering what's the difference between single quoted strings and double quoted string. How they differ each other. Doing some research, I've found out that double-quoted strings can have variables in it that is interpreted or parsed by the compiler while single-quoted strings ignores variables in it.

For example,

$name = "John Doe";
echo = 'Hello $name'; // This outputs Hello $name
echo = "Hello $name"; // This outputs Hello John Doe
As you can see, the first echo does not evaluate $name but instead it just displayed it directly. While the second echo evaluates the variable $name and displayed John Doe.


PHP strings
can be specified not just in two ways, but
in four ways.
  1. Single quoted strings will display things almost completely "as is." Variables and most escape sequences will not be interpreted. The exception is that to display a literal single quote, you can escape it with a back slash \', and to display a back slash, you can escape it with another backslash \\ (So yes, even single quoted strings are parsed).
  2. Double quote strings will display a host of escaped characters (including some regexes), and variables in the strings will be evaluated. An important point here is that you can use curly braces to isolate the name of the variable you want evaluated. For example let's say you have the variable $type and you what to echo "The $types are" That will look for the variable
    $types. To get around this use echo "The {$type}s are" You can put the left brace before or after the dollar sign. Take a look at string parsing to see how to use array variables and such.
  3. Heredoc string syntax works like double quoted strings. It starts with <<<. After this operator, an identifier is provided, then a newline. The string itself follows, and then the same identifier again to close the quotation. You don't need to escape quotes in this syntax.
  4. Nowdoc (since PHP 5.3.0) string syntax works essentially like single quoted strings. The difference is that not even single quotes or backslashes have to be escaped. A nowdoc is identified with the same <<< sequence used for heredocs, but the identifier which follows is enclosed in single quotes, e.g. <<<'EOT'. No parsing is done in nowdoc.
Speed:

I would not put too much weight on single quotes being faster than double quotes. They probably are faster in certain situations. Here's an article explaining one manner in which single and double quotes are essentially equally fast since PHP 4.3 (Useless Optimizations toward the bottom, section C). Also, this benchmarks page has a single vs double quote comparison. Most of the comparisons are the same. There is one comparison where double quotes are slower than single quotes.

Source, Stackoverflow

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