(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
phpversion — Gets the current PHP version
$extension
= null
): string|falseReturns a string containing the version of the currently running PHP parser or extension.
extension
An optional extension name.
Returns the current PHP version as a string.
If a string argument is provided for
extension
parameter, phpversion()
returns the version of that extension, or false
if there is no version
information associated or the extension isn't enabled.
Version | Description |
---|---|
8.0.0 |
extension is nullable now.
|
Example #1 phpversion() example
<?php
// prints e.g. 'Current PHP version: 4.1.1'
echo 'Current PHP version: ' . phpversion();
// prints e.g. '2.0' or nothing if the extension isn't enabled
echo phpversion('tidy');
?>
Example #2 PHP_VERSION_ID
example and usage
<?php
// PHP_VERSION_ID is available as of PHP 5.2.7, if our
// version is lower than that, then emulate it
if (!defined('PHP_VERSION_ID')) {
$version = explode('.', PHP_VERSION);
define('PHP_VERSION_ID', ($version[0] * 10000 + $version[1] * 100 + $version[2]));
}
// PHP_VERSION_ID is defined as a number, where the higher the number
// is, the newer a PHP version is used. It's defined as used in the above
// expression:
//
// $version_id = $major_version * 10000 + $minor_version * 100 + $release_version;
//
// Now with PHP_VERSION_ID we can check for features this PHP version
// may have, this doesn't require to use version_compare() everytime
// you check if the current PHP version may not support a feature.
//
// For example, we may here define the PHP_VERSION_* constants thats
// not available in versions prior to 5.2.7
if (PHP_VERSION_ID < 50207) {
define('PHP_MAJOR_VERSION', $version[0]);
define('PHP_MINOR_VERSION', $version[1]);
define('PHP_RELEASE_VERSION', $version[2]);
// and so on, ...
}
?>
Note:
This information is also available in the predefined constant
PHP_VERSION
. More versioning information is available using thePHP_VERSION_*
constants.