That's just the case : "too see what happens if ...".

I agree that anyone will never meet such a case in everydays' programming.
;-)

2007/10/23, Andrew Ballard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> On 10/23/07, Robert Cummings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > My bad, print is not a function, and so:
> >
> >     print( 'toctoc ' ).'hihi ';
> >
> > is equivalent to:
> >
> >     print( 'tocktoc '.'hihi ' );
> >
>
> Ah. I see. I knew they were optional, but I didn't know that when you
> include them PHP evaluates ('toctoc') before it passes the value off
> to print(). I just figured that with or without the parentheses it
> would pass 'toctoc' to print() and return a result that would be
> concatenated inline with the other values. I guess that's the part I
> didn't understand about the difference between a function and a
> language construct in PHP.
>
> As for the OP, I still don't know why anyone would even dream of
> creating code that does this other than "to see what would happen if
> we ...."  :-)
>
> Andrew
>
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