On Thu, January 17, 2008 2:06 am, Jochem Maas wrote:
> Richard Lynch schreef:
>> On Wed, January 16, 2008 9:57 am, Daniel Brown wrote:
>>> echo($h."\n".$i."\n"); // echo is a construct, but as expected, can
>>> use parentheses()
>>
>> Just to be picuyane:
>>
>> echo isn't using the parens.
>>
>> The parens are forcing PHP to evaluate the concatenation of the
>> strings FIRST, and then echo them.
>>
>> And since the concatenation operator takes precedence over the
>> language construct, the parens are basically useless cruft.
>
> not to mention that it should be written as (spaces are optional ;-)):
>
> echo $h, "\n", $i, "\n";
>
> which avoids any concat operation and dumps the result of each
> expression
> direct to the buffer :-)

I wanted to avoid the whole concat versus multi-arg performance
thread, since it usually takes about a week before somebody posts the
definitive answer, showing the actual PHP opcodes generated...

And I don't recall the answer, and don't give a [bleep] since it's
almost never the bottleneck in an application in the first place...

-- 
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Know what I want?
I want you to buy a CD from some indie artist.
http://cdbaby.com/from/lynch
Yeah, I get a buck. So?

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