Difference between revisions of "Learning PHP (1)"

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A PHP page can be all PHP: one code island, no static HTML.
 
A PHP page can be all PHP: one code island, no static HTML.
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This is common with [[Web application|web applications]], such as [[WordPress]].
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Web applications commonly have a mix of:
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* All-PHP pages
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* Pages which mix HTML with code islands according to a [[web template system]].
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 16:48, 29 August 2015

This article introduces PHP for the complete beginner.

Requirements

Getting started with PHP requires:

Web server with PHP interpreter

Most web servers, including the widely-used Apache HTTP Server, have the PHP interpreter pre-installed.

Text editor

You can use any text editor to edit PHP files.

PHP files

PHP files have the .php extension.

PHP and HTML

PHP pages can contain HTML (and CSS, and JavaScript), which behaves the same as it does in static web pages.

PHP code

In principle, a PHP could be all HTML, with no PHP code.

This is not typically done, as it would defeat the purpose of PHP.

PHP code islands

PHP code islands (or code blocks) contain PHP code.

PHP code islands must not include HTML, CSS or JavaScript; using these languages inside a code island will trigger a PHP error.

You can use PHP code to generate text, including HTML, CSS, etc. See echo (PHP).

Mixing code islands and HTML

You can freely mix HTML and code islands in a PHP page.

Where does the PHP code go?

Beginners commonly ask: Where does the PHP code island go in the page?

Answer:

  • If the code island contains PHP code which generates text, put the code island where you want the text to appear in the page.
  • If the code island does not generate content, the code island typically goes at the top of the page, although this is not a requirement.

All PHP

A PHP page can be all PHP: one code island, no static HTML.

This is common with web applications, such as WordPress.

Web applications commonly have a mix of:

See also

External links