When PHP parses a file, it looks for opening and closing tags, which are
<?php
and ?>
which tell PHP to
start and stop interpreting the code between them. Parsing in this manner
allows PHP to be embedded in all sorts of different documents, as
everything outside of a pair of opening and closing tags is ignored by the
PHP parser.
PHP includes a short echo tag <?=
which is a
short-hand to the more verbose <?php echo
.
Example #1 PHP Opening and Closing Tags
1. <?php echo 'if you want to serve PHP code in XHTML or XML documents,
use these tags'; ?>
2. You can use the short echo tag to <?= 'print this string' ?>.
It's equivalent to <?php echo 'print this string' ?>.
3. <? echo 'this code is within short tags, but will only work '.
'if short_open_tag is enabled'; ?>
Short tags (example three) are available by default but can be disabled either via the short_open_tag php.ini configuration file directive, or are disabled by default if PHP is built with the --disable-short-tags configuration.
Note:
As short tags can be disabled it is recommended to only use the normal tags (
<?php ?>
and<?= ?>
) to maximise compatibility.
If a file contains only PHP code, it is preferable to omit the PHP closing tag at the end of the file. This prevents accidental whitespace or new lines being added after the PHP closing tag, which may cause unwanted effects because PHP will start output buffering when there is no intention from the programmer to send any output at that point in the script.
<?php
echo "Hello world";
// ... more code
echo "Last statement";
// the script ends here with no PHP closing tag