PHP Tutorial Example
Example
PHP Mail
PHP Libxml
PHP HTTP
PHP Filter
PHP Zip
PHP Directory
PHP Error
PHP SimpleXML
PHP Calendar
PHP Date
PHP Misc
PHP XML
PHP FTP
PHP Math
PHP MySQL
PHP Filesystem
PHP Array
PHP String
PHP Tutorial
PHP Introduction
PHP Installation
PHP Syntax
PHP Variables
PHP Echo
PHP Strings
PHP Operators
PHP Comments
PHP Include File
PHP Require
PHP If Statement
PHP If Else
PHP Elseif
PHP Switch
PHP Forms
PHP Functions
PHP Array
PHP While Loop
PHP For Loop
PHP For Each
PHP Do While
PHP POST and GET
PHP Magic Quotes
PHP htmlentities
PHP Files
PHP File
PHP File Create
PHP File Open
PHP File Close
PHP File Write
PHP File Read
PHP File Delete
PHP File Append
PHP File Truncate
PHP File Upload
PHP Strings
PHP strpos
PHP str replace
PHP substrreplace
PHP Capitalization
PHP explode
PHP implode
PHP Advanced
PHP Date
PHP Session
PHP Cookies
PHP Include
PHP Email
PHP Secure Email
PHP Error
PHP Exception
PHP Filter
PHP and AJAX
AJAX Intro
AJAX PHP
AJAX Database
AJAX XML
AJAX Live Search
AJAX RSS Reader
AJAX Poll
PHP XML
XML Expat Parser
XML DOM
XML SimpleXML
PHP Database
MySQL Introduction
MySQL Connect
MySQL Create
MySQL Insert
MySQL Select
MySQL Where
MySQL Order By
MySQL Update
MySQL Delete
PHP ODBC
PHP Misc
PHP connection aborted Function
In the last lesson, PHP Echo, we used strings a bit, but didn't talk about them in depth. Throughout your PHP career you will be using strings a great deal, so it is important to have a basic understanding of PHP strings.
Before you can use a string you have to create it! A string can be used directly in a function or it can be stored in a variable. Below we create the exact same string twice: first storing it into a variable and in the second case we send the string directly to echo.
$my_string = "Hiscript - Unlock your potential!";
echo "Hiscript - Unlock your potential!";
echo $my_string;
In the above example the first string will be stored into the variable $my_string, while the second string will be used in the echo and not be stored. Remember to save your strings into variables if you plan on using them more than once! Below is the output from our example code. They look identical just as we thought.
Thus far we have created strings using double-quotes, but it is just as correct to create a string using single-quotes, otherwise known as apostrophes.
$my_string = 'Hiscript - Unlock your potential!';
echo 'HIscript - Unlock your potential!';
echo $my_string;
If you want to use a single-quote within the string you have to escape the single-quote with a backslash .
We have used double-quotes and will continue to use them as the primary method for forming strings. Double-quotes allow for many special escaped characters to be used that you cannot do with a single-quote string. Once again, a backslash is used to escape a character.
$newline = "A newline is n ";
$return = "A carriage return is r";
$tab = "A tab is t";
$dollar = "A dollar sign is $";
$doublequote = "A double-quote is "";
Note: If you try to escape a character that doesn't need to be, such as an apostrophe, then the backslash will show up when you output the string.
These escaped characters are not very useful for outputting to a web page because HTML ignore extra white space. A tab, newline, and carriage return are all examples of extra (ignorable) white space. However, when writing to a file that may be read by human eyes these escaped characters are a valuable tool!
The two methods above are the traditional way to create strings in most programming languages. PHP introduces a more robust string creation tool called heredoc that lets the programmer create multi-line strings without using quotations. However, creating a string using heredoc is more difficult and can lead to problems if you do not properly code your string! Here's how to do it:
$my_string = <<<TEST
Hiscript.com
Webmaster Tutorials
Unlock your potential!
TEST;
echo $my_string;
here are a few very important things to remember when using heredoc.
* Use <<< and some identifier that you choose to begin the heredoc. In this example we chose TEST as our identifier.
* Repeat the identifier followed by a semicolon to end the heredoc string creation. In this example that was TEST;
* The closing sequence TEST; must occur on a line by itself and cannot be indented!
Another thing to note is that when you output this multi-line string to a web page, it will not span multiple lines because we did not have any <br /> tags contained inside our string! Here is the output made from the code above.

