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Difference between revisions of "PHP"

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==Ternary Conditionals==
 
==Ternary Conditionals==
 
=Loops=
 
=Loops=
 +
PHP has three main types of loops.
 +
 +
==for==
 +
 +
This loop is good for performing a set of instructions a set number of times. For example:
 +
 +
{{code|text=<source lang="php">
 +
for($i=0; $i<5; $i++) {
 +
    print "i = " . $i . "\n";
 +
}
 +
</source>
 +
}}
 +
The above will print the value of i 5 times and the values will be:
 +
 +
    i = 0
 +
    i = 1
 +
    i = 2
 +
    i = 3
 +
    i = 4
 +
 +
==foreach==
 +
 +
This is probably the most common loop in all of PHP. It makes going through the elements of an array really easy.
 +
For example:
 +
 +
{{code|text=<source lang="php">
 +
$names = array("Jack", "Jill", "Mike", "Sally", "Steve");
 +
 +
foreach($names as $name) {
 +
    print $name . "\n";
 +
}
 +
 +
</source>
 +
}}
 +
The output of this code will be
 +
    Jack
 +
    Jill
 +
    Mike
 +
    Sally
 +
    Steve
 +
 +
Another really neat thing you could have done with this is the following:
 +
 +
{{code|text=<source lang="php">
 +
$names = array("Jack", "Jill", "Mike", "Sally", "Steve");
 +
 +
foreach($names as $key => $name) {
 +
    print "Entry #: " . $key . " Name = " . $name . "\n";
 +
}
 +
 +
</source>
 +
}}
 +
 +
The output will be:
 +
    Entry #: 0 Name = Jack
 +
    Entry #: 1 Name = Jill
 +
    Entry #: 2 Name = Mike
 +
    Entry #: 3 Name = Sally
 +
    Entry #: 4 Name = Steve
 +
 +
Notice that in this example we define a $key. This key tells us what index of the array we are on. This is especially powerful when you use
 +
associative arrays like this:
 +
 +
{{code|text=<source lang="php">
 +
$names = array("Manager" => "Jack", "Sales" => "Jill", "Accounting" => "Mike", "HR" => "Sally", "CEO" => "Steve");
 +
 +
foreach($names as $key => $name) {
 +
    print "Position: " . $key . " Name = " . $name . "\n";
 +
}
 +
 +
</source>
 +
}}
 +
 +
    Position: Manager Name = Jack
 +
    Position: Sales Name = Jill
 +
    Position: Accounting Name = Mike
 +
    Position: HR Name = Sally
 +
    Position: CEO Name = Steve
 +
 +
==while==
 +
 +
The while loop is probably the most simple of them all. In it's most basic form:
 +
 +
{{code
 +
|text=
 +
<source lang="php">
 +
while( true statement ) {
 +
  ...
 +
}
 +
</source>
 +
}}
 +
 +
In this case, while "true statement" remains true, we will keep looping. For example:
 +
 +
{{code
 +
|text=
 +
<source lang="php">
 +
$i = 5;
 +
while( $i < 10 ) {
 +
  $i = $i + 1; // This could be shortened to $i++; But I'm being intentionally verbose.
 +
}
 +
</source>
 +
}}
 +
 +
The above code will continue to add 1 to $i until $i = 10, at which point the loop will stop. $i will retain it's value of 10.
 +
 
=User Input=
 
=User Input=
 
=User-Defined Functions=
 
=User-Defined Functions=

Revision as of 23:48, 2 June 2012

PHP Hypertext Preprocessor Language is a server side interpreted language written in C that runs primarily on Linux environments. PHP scripts can be run directly or served as webpages.

RPU0j.png This article needs immediate attention, and is in desperate need of content.

Development Environment

PHP CLI

Xochipilli says
Many Linux distributions package the PHP CLI separately
  • php -l check syntax
  • php -v version
  • php -e oneliner

Pear/Pecl

Your first application

Variables and data types

PHP is a dynamically-typed language, consisting of integers, arrays, associative arrays, strings, and classes.

Boolean Logic

Ternary Conditionals

Loops

PHP has three main types of loops.

for

This loop is good for performing a set of instructions a set number of times. For example:

 
for($i=0; $i<5; $i++) {
    print "i = " . $i . "\n";
}
 

The above will print the value of i 5 times and the values will be:

   i = 0
   i = 1
   i = 2
   i = 3
   i = 4

foreach

This is probably the most common loop in all of PHP. It makes going through the elements of an array really easy. For example:

 
$names = array("Jack", "Jill", "Mike", "Sally", "Steve");
 
foreach($names as $name) {
    print $name . "\n";
}
 
 

The output of this code will be

   Jack 
   Jill
   Mike
   Sally
   Steve

Another really neat thing you could have done with this is the following:

 
$names = array("Jack", "Jill", "Mike", "Sally", "Steve");
 
foreach($names as $key => $name) {
    print "Entry #: " . $key . " Name = " . $name . "\n";
}
 
 

The output will be:

   Entry #: 0 Name = Jack 
   Entry #: 1 Name = Jill
   Entry #: 2 Name = Mike
   Entry #: 3 Name = Sally
   Entry #: 4 Name = Steve

Notice that in this example we define a $key. This key tells us what index of the array we are on. This is especially powerful when you use associative arrays like this:

 
$names = array("Manager" => "Jack", "Sales" => "Jill", "Accounting" => "Mike", "HR" => "Sally", "CEO" => "Steve");
 
foreach($names as $key => $name) {
    print "Position: " . $key . " Name = " . $name . "\n";
}
 
 
   Position: Manager Name = Jack
   Position: Sales Name = Jill 
   Position: Accounting Name = Mike
   Position: HR Name = Sally
   Position: CEO Name = Steve

while

The while loop is probably the most simple of them all. In it's most basic form:

 
while( true statement ) {
   ...
}
 

In this case, while "true statement" remains true, we will keep looping. For example:

 
$i = 5;
while( $i < 10 ) {
   $i = $i + 1; // This could be shortened to $i++; But I'm being intentionally verbose.
}
 

The above code will continue to add 1 to $i until $i = 10, at which point the loop will stop. $i will retain it's value of 10.

User Input

User-Defined Functions

Defining functions in PHP is accomplished using the function keyword, followed by the function name and comma delimited arguments, surrounded by parenthesis:

 
function myFunction(arg1, arg2) {
...
}
 

If the function is encapsulated in an object, you may specify the visibility of the function, public, protected or private.

 
class MyClass
{
    public function myFunction(arg1, arg2) {
    ...
    }
...
}
 

Unlike some programming languages, like Perl or Python, PHP member functions implicitly extract their parent into the $this variable.

Security

code

Dangerous functions

  • include()
  • eval()
  • mysql_query()
  • pgsql_query()
  • phpinfo()
  • system()

Dangerous practices

  • include()
  • echo(), print(), sprintf()
  • string sanitizing using non-recursive string replacement
  • improper type handling

Best practices

  • File inclusion
  • Type Handling
 
$clean_int = (int)$dangerous_int;
 
  • XSS
  • SQL Injection

Preventing SQL injection in PHP applications is relatively simple, so long as you are thorough. String input, surrounded by single quotes can be sanitized with mysql_real_escape_string(), which will escape dangerous characters such as single quotes (as well as \, so that you cannot escape the escapes!). Sanitizing integer input can be done simply by casting the input to integer.

php.ini

See Also : PHP Patching

PHP is part of a series on programming.
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