(PHP 4, PHP 5)
define — Definiert eine benannte Konstante
Definiert während der Laufzeit eine benannte Konstante.
Der Name der Konstante
Der Wert der Konstante. Es sind nur Skalar- und NULL-Werte erlaubt. Skalarwerte sind Ganzzahlen, Gleitkommazahlen, Zeichenketten oder boolsche Werte. Es ist möglich, Konstanten vom Typ Ressource zu definieren, allerdings wird dies nicht empfohlen, da es unvorhersagbares Verhalten des Programms zur Folge haben kann.
Falls auf TRUE gesetzt, wird bei der Konstante nicht zwischen Groß- und Kleinschreibung unterschieden. In der Voreinstellung wird zwischen Groß- und Kleinschreibung unterschieden, d.h KONSTANTE und Konstante repräsentieren unterschiedliche Werte.
Hinweis:
Groß-/Kleinschreibungsunabhängige Konstanten werden kleingeschrieben gespeichert.
Gibt bei Erfolg TRUE zurück. Im Fehlerfall wird FALSE zurückgegeben.
Beispiel #1 Konstanten definieren
<?php
define("KONSTANTE", "Hallo Welt.");
echo KONSTANTE; // gibt "Hallo Welt." aus
echo Konstante; // gibt "Konstante" aus und erzeugt eine Benachrichtigung
define("BEGRUESSUNG", "Hallo Du.", true);
echo BEGRUESSUNG; // gibt "Hallo Du." aus
echo Begruessung; // gibt "Hallo Du." aus
?>
Something I found out the "hard" way today: integers starting with 0 won't work.
<?php
define('SOMECONSTANT', 09900);
var_dump(SOMECONSTANT);
?>
Produces int(0)
<?php
define('SOMECONSTANT', 9900);
var_dump(SOMECONSTANT);
?>
Produces int(9900)
Hi,
Here is a trick to use constants within the heredoc notation.
<?php
define('MY_CONSTANT','foo bar')
$cst = 'cst';
function cst($constant){
return $constant;
}
$string = <<<EOF
My constante MY_CONSTANT : {$cst(MY_CONSTANT)} ...
EOF;
echo $string;
?>
That will echo :
My constante MY_CONSTANT : foo bar ...
As you can use function within the heredoc notation the idea is to use a fonction to return the value of the constant.
Be carefull, to use a function, it's necessary to declare the name of the function as a variable and to use that varaible during the "call" of the constant.
It works for me and doesn't seem too messy.
Hope that will help.
Just in case:
You cannot set a constant to be a class. For example:
define ("WSDLCLIENT",new soapclient(WSDLSERVER, 'wsdl'));
You cannot do this.
The value of a constant can be the value of another constant.
<?php
define("NEW_GOOD_NAME_CONSTANT", "I have a value");
define("OLD_BAD_NAME_CONSTANT", NEW_GOOD_NAME_CONSTANT);
echo NEW_GOOD_NAME_CONSTANT; // current
echo OLD_BAD_NAME_CONSTANT; // legacy
?>
Note that define don't care at all about the constant name, you can give everything as a constant name, even if the PHP documentation says that the allowed characters are [a-zA-Z_\x7f-\xff][a-zA-Z0-9_\x7f-\xff]*
Just try this :
<?php define('anything::()$', 'test'); ?>
You won't be able to access this constant though, it will throw a parse error, either through constant() or define(), but if you do that :
<?php print_r(get_defined_constants()); ?>
You will see that the constant is registered at the end of the array. Yes that's totally useless. But you can try other things that will work with constant() :
<?php define('...', 'test'); echo constant('...'); ?>
Will echo 'test'. Yeah that's a pretty strange behavior.
And please note that defining object constants outside of objets don't work :
<?php
class myObject { }
define('myObject::CONSTANT', 'test');
?>
My notice to: redeclare define - it is possible
php -v
--> PHP 5.2.6-3ubuntu4.1 with Suhosin-Patch 0.9.6.2
Zend Engine v2.2.0, Copyright (c) 1998-2008 Zend Technologies
php -r "define('TEST','foo',true);
var_dump(TEST);
define('TEST','bar');
var_dump(TEST);"
string(3) "foo"
string(3) "bar"
greetings
A note on redefining:
Constants can't be redefined:
$ php -r "define('A', 1); var_dump('A'); define('A', 2); var_dump('A');";
string(1) "A"
PHP Notice: Constant A already defined in Command line code on line 1
string(1) "A"
But using the case insensitive setting shows that the internal
representation is lower case:
$ php -r "define('A', 1, true); var_dump('A'); define('A', 2); var_dump('A');";
string(1) "A"
string(1) "A"
Note the lower case 'a' in the second define() here:
$ php -r "define('A', 1, true); var_dump('A'); define('a', 2); var_dump('A');";
string(1) "A"
PHP Notice: Constant a already defined in Command line code on line 1
string(1) "A"
define() will define constants exactly as specified. So, if you want to define a constant in a namespace, you will need to specify the namespace in your call to define(), even if you're calling define() from within a namespace. The following examples will make it clear.
The following code will define the constant "MESSAGE" in the global namespace (i.e. "\MESSAGE").
<?php
namespace test;
define('MESSAGE', 'Hello world!');
?>
The following code will define two constants in the "test" namespace.
<?php
namespace test;
define('test\HELLO', 'Hello world!');
define(__NAMESPACE__ . '\GOODBYE', 'Goodbye cruel world!');
?>
This code will define every key of an array, and if its a multidimentional array it will define it as parent_child1_child2_etc.
<?php
function define_array( $array, $keys = NULL )
{
foreach( $array as $key => $value )
{
$keyname = ($keys ? $keys . "_" : "") . $key;
if( is_array( $array[$key] ) )
define_array( $array[$key], $keyname );
else
define( $keyname, $value );
}
}
?>
In PHP 4.4.9, you cannot use certain names for constants.
Specifically, reserved words such as 'PRINT', 'IF', etc.
Oddly enough, you get different behaviour for some:
<?php
define('IF', 42);
echo "IF: ", IF, "<hr />\n";
?>
yields PHP Parse error: syntax error, unexpected T_IF
<?php
define('PRINT', 13);
echo "PRINT: ", PRINT, "<hr />\n";
?>
yields PHP Parse error: syntax error, unexpected ')'
Not sure if this is still true in PHP 5 or not, but it's worth noting if it is.
With php 5.30 it is possible to make some "restrictions", in case u use namespaces...
The following function allows only uppercase and, if 3 param isset, gives E_USER_ERROR instead of E_NOTICE:
<?php
namespace bla;
function define($c,$v,$x=false) {
$c = strtoupper($c);
if (!defined($c)) {
// not to use \define here, as the syntax highlighting does not work correctly here...
return define($c, $v, true);
} else if ($x == true) {
trigger_error('setting constant "'.$c.'" is not allowed', E_USER_ERROR);
}
return null;
}
define('PHP_VERSION', '1');
define('PHP_VERSION', '1') || trigger_error('constant already defined', E_USER_NOTICE);
define('PHP_VERSION', '1', true);
?>
Probably the most efficient way of creating a constant array is to put it in a function like this:
<?php
function my_const_arr()
{
return array
(
'key1' => 'val 1',
'key2' => 'va' 2'
);
}
?>
Then use at will like so...
<?php $my_const_arr = my_const_arr(); ?>
Referring to "This-Is-A-Test" constant below.
When echoing it the script thinks you performing a series of minus (subtraction) thus since THIS and IS, A, TEST are not defined they are 0 by default. So 0-0-0-0 = 0.
As explained that a hyphen cannot be used within a variable.
I'm reffering to the note below by mittiprovence.
The described behavior has nothing to do with the fact that there is a constant in the condition.
Comparing a non-numeric string to the integer 0 by using == will return true, since the string will be casted to integer - which will be zero. If your string starts with a number, it will be castet to an integer with the number as value.
To avoid the described behavior, you should use === instead of ==.
Finally, the behavior discribed by mittiprovence is exacly the expected behavior as defined in the manual.
For further information read the manual:
http://www.php.net/manual/en/types.comparisons.php
http://www.php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php
http://www.php.net/manual/en/language.types.string.php #language.types.string.conversion
<?php
if (0 == "some string") { // is true
echo "0 == 'some string'";
}
if (1 == "some string") { // is false
echo "1 == 'some string'";
}
if (1 == "1 some string") { // is true
echo "1 == '1 some string'";
}
if (0 === "some string") { // is false
echo "0 === 'some string'";
}
?>
Found something interesting. The following define:
<?php
define("THIS-IS-A-TEST","This is a test");
echo THIS-IS-A-TEST;
?>
Will return a '0'.
Whereas this:
<?php
define("THIS_IS_A_TEST","This is a test");
echo THIS_IS_A_TEST;
?>
Will return 'This is a test'.
This may be common knowledge but I only found out a few minutes ago.
[EDIT BY danbrown AT php DOT net: The original poster is referring to the hyphens versus underscores. Hyphens do not work in defines or variables, which is expected behavior.]
A better solution to that of thscheer at web dot de, is to simply serialize the array.
for example:
<?php
$fruits = array("apple", "banana", "orange");
define("FRUITS", serialize($fruits));
// Now to use it
$my_fruits = unserialize(FRUITS);
?>
As you can see this is a much simpler and more efficient way to stuff arrays into constants.
For translating with variables and define, take also a look on the constant() function.
Example :
<?php
define('PAYMENT_IDEAL',"iDEAL Payment ( NL only )");
define('PAYMENT_MASTERCARD',"Mastercard Payment ( international )");
$payparam='MASTERCARD';
echo constant("PAYMENT_$payparam");
// output :
// Mastercard Payment ( international )
?>
How to define an array as constant with define?
there is a simple way to define an array of values as constant...
just
define ("constant-name","value1,value2,value3,value4");
$t_array = preg_split('/,/', constant(constant-name), -1, PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);
var_dump($t_array);
array(4) { [0]=> string(6) "value1" [1]=> string(6) "value2" [2]=> string(6) "value3" [3]=> string(6) "value4" }
Now you can iterate over the array defined as constant ...
I'm not sure if it's version dependent, but apparently this works:
define('APPLICATION_NOW', time());
This can be quite handy for time-dependent code...
You can then do:
class foo {
$private now = APPLICATION_NOW;
}
and have a consistent time-stamp across the application, which is nice.
Works for me in 5.2.5
I didn't think it worked before...
You can store your constant as the value of a variable like this:
$variable=VARIABLE;
To access the constant, do this: constant($variable).
Beware: if your variable changes, then you loose your reference to the constant - but the constant itself will not change.
I've found this especially useful for storing the constant string (i.e. VARIABLE) in a database.
just a note to the previous post by e s lin d sey at g mail dot co m:
Well as u said, it is not the best workaround. To resolve this "Problem" without getting incredible loss of performance, you are able to make the use of "variable functions" like "variable variables":
<?php
$def = 'constant';
$string = <<<END
This is PHP running on<br />
{$def('PHP_OS')}
END;
var_dump($string);
?>
In this example we make use of the "constant" function which is builtin, and it will output:
string(37) " This is PHP running on
WINNT"
Tested on PHP 5...
Best regards
Constants can't be referenced from within quotes or (more importantly IMHO) from within HEREDOC syntax. This is a huge drawback in my opinion. Here's two of my workarounds:
<?php
//PHP5 only -- more efficient
$constarray = get_defined_constants(true);
foreach($constarray['user'] as $key => $val)
eval(sprintf('$_CONSTANTS[\'%s\'] = \'%s\';', addslashes($key), addslashes($val)));
//PHP4+ -- less efficient because it defines (potentially) hundreds of unnecessary constants
foreach(get_defined_constants() as $key => $val)
eval(sprintf('$_CONSTANTS[\'%s\'] = \'%s\';', addslashes($key), addslashes($val)));
?>
Now you can refer to your defined constants using the $_CONSTANTS array. Note that because this is NOT a superglobal, a few caveats apply:
<?php
//run code snippet here to define $_CONSTANTS in global scope...
$mv = $_CONSTANTS['FOO']; //works
function my_function1()
{
$mv = $_CONSTANTS['BAR']; //doesn't work! not defined!
}
function my_function2()
{
global $_CONSTANTS;
$mv = $_CONSTANTS['BAR']; //ah, this works!
}
?>
I realize this is not ideal, either for performance or for convenience of being able to refer to constants without regard to scope, but it is a workaround that works. Depending on your application, it may be easier to shift your paradigm a bit and use the following method instead, declaring your constants as variables first:
<?php
//first, define our constants...
$_CONSTANTS['FOO'] = 'bar';
$_CONSTANTS['BAR'] = 'foo';
//now, turn them into real constants...
foreach($_CONSTANTS as $key => $val)
define($key, $val);
//now, you can use either format to refer to a constant
print($_CONSTANTS['FOO']); //prints 'bar'
print(FOO); //prints 'bar'
print("$_CONSTANTS['FOO']"); //prints 'bar'
//prints 'blah bar blah'
print <<<EOF
blah {$_CONSTANTS['FOO']} blah
EOF;
?>
Hope this helps some of you out there, I know being able to utilize my constants in HEREDOC helped me a ton!
a basic function to auto assign a numeric value that increase by itself each time - used in some permission style scripts
<?php
function define_bitwise($constant_name, $reset = False)
{
static $bitwise_next = 1;
if ( $reset === True )
{
$bitwise_next = 1;
}
define($constant_name, $bitwise_next);
$bitwise_next += $bitwise_next;
}
?>
when reset it set to True, resets that value to 1 and starts afresh
Intersting to note:
I found this in php5 on windows
If you try to unset a constant (which you cant but maybe you have a Jr. programmer or something). The error message that is thrown is:
<?php
define ("SOME_CONSTANT", true);
unset (SOME_CONSTANT);
?>
Parse error: parse error, unexpected ')', expecting T_PAAMAYIM_NEKUDOTAYIM
Watch out. You can define a new constant with the name NULL with define("NULL","FOO");. But you must use the function constant("NULL"); to get it's value. NULL without the function call to the constant() function will still retrieve the special type NULL value.
Within a class there is no problem, as const NULL="Foo"; will be accessible as myClass::NULL.
An improvement on the function from bobbykjack at yahoo dot co dot uk on the concept by richard dot quadling at bandvulc dot co dot uk:
<?php
function adefine($constant_name, $value=null) {
static $increment = 0; // 1 for bitmask
if (is_null($value)) {
define($constant_name, ++$increment); // $increment=$increment<<1 for bitmask
} else {
define($constant_name, $value);
if (is_numeric($value)) {
$increment = $value;
}
}
}
?>
If you pass it a second argument it defines it normally, and resets the increment if the value is numeric. This way the function can replace define, and you can reset the counter for a new set of constants.
<?php
adefine ('RULE_CALLBACK_FORMAT', 1); // 1
adefine ('RULE_CHANGE_CALLBACK_ON_ERROR'); // 2
adefine ('RULE_CHANGE_COMPARE_DATE'); // 3
adefine('KEYWORD', 'hodgepodge'); // hodgepodge <-- defined normally
adefine ('RULE_CHANGE_ON_DATE'); // 4
adefine ('ERROR_DESC', 1); // 1 <-- Counter reset
adefine ('ERROR_EXPECTED_RESULT'); // 2
?>
Better pack with define() for all who really miss Java package management:
Use this "manifest.php" on very first script start or copy it to your config.somehow.php.
<?php
$__packages = array(
"org.ilove.java.more",
"org.ilove.python.too",
"net.php.isok"
);
define("C_IS_WINDOWS", false);
define("C_DIR", (C_IS_WINDOWS ? "\\" : "/"));
define("C_PATH_ROOT", str_replace("/", C_DIR, $_SERVER["DOCUMENT_ROOT"]).C_DIR);
define("C_PATH_CORE", C_PATH_ROOT."core".C_DIR);
define("C_PATH_CLASS", C_PATH_CORE."classes".C_DIR);
define("C_APPLICATION_BASE", C_PATH_CORE.C_DIR."application".C_DIR);
$total_packages = 0;
$i = sizeof($__packages);
while($i-- > 0) {
$tokens = explode(".", $__packages[$i]);
$j = sizeof($tokens);
while($j-- > 0) {
$token = strtolower(trim($tokens[$j]));
if(strlen($token) > 0 && !defined($token)) {
define($token, ($j == 0 ? C_PATH_CLASS : "").$tokens[$j].C_DIR);
$total_packages++;
}
}
}
define("C_PACKAGE_COUNT", $total_packages);
?>
With restrictions on non-package constants, you now can call your files like that:
<?php
require_once org.ilove.java.more."Than.php";
?>
Regards
Robi
---[Editor's Note]---
As of PHP 5.0.0 this is possible. You can define class-only constants, which can be called like Foo::Constant1 from the outside
---[End Note]---
Please keep in mind that
class AClass {
define ("Const1", "Value1");
... }
didn't work. You have to make all your constant definitions before you open the class. So
define ("Const1", "Value1");
class AClass {
... }
would be correct.
Wonder how to work with variable which name is stored in a constant?
Here it is:
<?php
define("VAR_NAME","test");
// assigning value
${VAR_NAME} = "value";
// getting value back
echo ${VAR_NAME};
?>
To use a constant to show an element of an array inside a string:
define ('C', 0); print ("element 0: {$a[C]}");
The { & } around the variable signals that what's inside should be treated as a variable and not a string.
Note that 'print ("a constant:{C}");' wont work as ZERO is a constant.