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Konstanten

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Eine Konstante ist ein Bezeichner (Name) für einen einfachen Wert. Wie der Name bereits nahelegt, kann der Wert einer Konstanten zur Laufzeit des Skripts nicht verändert werden (außer bei Magischen Konstanten, die nicht wirklich Konstanten sind). Konstanten unterscheiden standardmäßig zwischen Groß- und Kleinschreibung. Nach gängiger Konvention werden Konstanten immer in Großbuchstaben geschrieben.

Hinweis:

Vor PHP 8.0.0 konnten Konstanten, die mit der Funktion define() definiert wurden, ohne Berücksichtigung der Groß- und Kleinschreibung verwendet werden.

Der Name einer Konstanten folgt den gleichen Regeln wie alle anderen Bezeichner in PHP. Ein gültiger Name beginnt mit einem Buchstaben oder einem Unterstrich, gefolgt von beliebig vielen Buchstaben, Ziffern oder Unterstrichen. Als regulärer Ausdruck könnte das so beschrieben werden: ^[a-zA-Z_\x80-\xff][a-zA-Z0-9_\x80-\xff]*$

Es ist möglich, Konstanten mit reservierten oder gar ungültigen Namen mittels define() zu definieren, deren Wert nur mit der Funktion constant() gelesen werden kann. Allerdings wird dies nicht empfohlen.

Tipp

Siehe auch Userland-Namensregeln.

Beispiel #1 Gültige und ungültige Namen für Konstanten

<?php

// Gültige Namen für Konstanten
define("FOO", "irgendwas");
define("FOO2", "etwas anderes");
define("FOO_BAR", "irgendwas ganz anderes");

// Ungültige Namen für Konstanten
define("2FOO", "irgendwas");

// Folgendes ist korrekt, sollte aber vermieden werden:
// PHP könnte eines Tages eine magische Konstante unterstützen,
// die Ihr Skript nicht mehr wie gewünscht funktionieren lässt
define("__FOO__", "irgendwas");

?>

Hinweis: Für unsere Zwecke ist hier ein Buchstabe a-z, A-Z und die ASCII-Zeichen von 128 bis 255 (0x80-0xff).

Wie bei superglobals ist der Geltungsbereich einer Konstanten global. Unabhängig vom Geltungsbereich kann in einem Skript überall auf eine Konstante zugegriffen werden. Für mehr Information zum Geltungsbereich lesen Sie bitte den Abschnitt über den Geltungsbereich von Variablen.

Hinweis: Seit PHP 7.1.0 können Klassenkonstanten eine Sichtbarkeit von protected oder private deklarieren, wodurch sie nur im hierarchischen Bereich der Klasse zur Verfügung stehen, in der sie definiert sind.

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User Contributed Notes 9 notes

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248
wbcarts at juno dot com
11 years ago
11/14/2016 - note updated by sobak
-----

CONSTANTS and PHP Class Definitions

Using "define('MY_VAR', 'default value')" INSIDE a class definition does not work as expected. You have to use the PHP keyword 'const' and initialize it with a scalar value -- boolean, int, float, string (or array in PHP 5.6+) -- right away.

<?php

define
('MIN_VALUE', '0.0'); // RIGHT - Works OUTSIDE of a class definition.
define('MAX_VALUE', '1.0'); // RIGHT - Works OUTSIDE of a class definition.

//const MIN_VALUE = 0.0; RIGHT - Works both INSIDE and OUTSIDE of a class definition.
//const MAX_VALUE = 1.0; RIGHT - Works both INSIDE and OUTSIDE of a class definition.

class Constants
{
//define('MIN_VALUE', '0.0'); WRONG - Works OUTSIDE of a class definition.
//define('MAX_VALUE', '1.0'); WRONG - Works OUTSIDE of a class definition.

const MIN_VALUE = 0.0; // RIGHT - Works INSIDE of a class definition.
const MAX_VALUE = 1.0; // RIGHT - Works INSIDE of a class definition.

public static function getMinValue()
{
return
self::MIN_VALUE;
}

public static function
getMaxValue()
{
return
self::MAX_VALUE;
}
}

?>

#Example 1:
You can access these constants DIRECTLY like so:
* type the class name exactly.
* type two (2) colons.
* type the const name exactly.

#Example 2:
Because our class definition provides two (2) static functions, you can also access them like so:
* type the class name exactly.
* type two (2) colons.
* type the function name exactly (with the parentheses).

<?php

#Example 1:
$min = Constants::MIN_VALUE;
$max = Constants::MAX_VALUE;

#Example 2:
$min = Constants::getMinValue();
$max = Constants::getMaxValue();

?>

Once class constants are declared AND initialized, they cannot be set to different values -- that is why there are no setMinValue() and setMaxValue() functions in the class definition -- which means they are READ-ONLY and STATIC (shared by all instances of the class).
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21
gried at NOSPAM dot nsys dot by
8 years ago
Lets expand comment of 'storm' about usage of undefined constants. His claim that 'An undefined constant evaluates as true...' is wrong and right at same time. As said further in documentation ' If you use an undefined constant, PHP assumes that you mean the name of the constant itself, just as if you called it as a string...'. So yeah, undefined global constant when accessed directly will be resolved as string equal to name of sought constant (as thought PHP supposes that programmer had forgot apostrophes and autofixes it) and non-zero non-empty string converts to True.

There are two ways to prevent this:
1. always use function constant('CONST_NAME') to get constant value (BTW it also works for class constants - constant('CLASS_NAME::CONST_NAME') );
2. use only class constants (that are defined inside of class using keyword const) because they are not converted to string when not found but throw exception instead (Fatal error: Undefined class constant).
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23
katana at katana-inc dot com
22 years ago
Warning, constants used within the heredoc syntax (http://www.php.net/manual/en/language.types.string.php) are not interpreted!

Editor's Note: This is true. PHP has no way of recognizing the constant from any other string of characters within the heredoc block.
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12
warwick dot jm dot barnes at gmail dot com
3 years ago
The documentation says, "You can access constants anywhere in your script without regard to scope", but it's worth keeping in mind that a const declaration must appear in the source file before the place where it's used.

This doesn't work (using PHP 5.4):
<?php
foo
();
const
X = 1;
function
foo() {
echo
"Value of X: " . X;
}
?>
Result: "Value of X: X"

But this works:
<?php
const X = 1;
foo();
function
foo() {
echo
"Value of X: " . X;
}
?>
Result: "Value of X: 1"

This is potentially confusing because you can refer to a function that occurs later in your source file, but not a constant. Even though the const declaration is processed at compile time, it behaves a bit like it's being processed at run time.
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16
Raheel Khan
9 years ago
class constant are by default public in nature but they cannot be assigned visibility factor and in turn gives syntax error

<?php

class constants {

const
MAX_VALUE = 10;
public const
MIN_VALUE =1;

}

// This will work
echo constants::MAX_VALUE;

// This will return syntax error
echo constants::MIN_VALUE;
?>
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14
Andreas R.
16 years ago
If you are looking for predefined constants like
* PHP_OS (to show the operating system, PHP was compiled for; php_uname('s') might be more suitable),
* DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR ("\\" on Win, '/' Linux,...)
* PATH_SEPARATOR (';' on Win, ':' on Linux,...)
they are buried in 'Predefined Constants' under 'List of Reserved Words' in the appendix:
http://www.php.net/manual/en/reserved.constants.php
while the latter two are also mentioned in 'Directory Functions'
http://www.php.net/manual/en/ref.dir.php
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14
hafenator2000 at yahoo dot com
18 years ago
PHP Modules also define constants. Make sure to avoid constant name collisions. There are two ways to do this that I can think of.
First: in your code make sure that the constant name is not already used. ex. <?php if (! defined("CONSTANT_NAME")) { Define("CONSTANT_NAME","Some Value"); } ?> This can get messy when you start thinking about collision handling, and the implications of this.
Second: Use some off prepend to all your constant names without exception ex. <?php Define("SITE_CONSTANT_NAME","Some Value"); ?>

Perhaps the developers or documentation maintainers could recommend a good prepend and ask module writers to avoid that prepend in modules.
up
21
ewspencer at industrex dot com
20 years ago
I find using the concatenation operator helps disambiguate value assignments with constants. For example, setting constants in a global configuration file:

<?php
define
('LOCATOR', "/locator");
define('CLASSES', LOCATOR."/code/classes");
define('FUNCTIONS', LOCATOR."/code/functions");
define('USERDIR', LOCATOR."/user");
?>

Later, I can use the same convention when invoking a constant's value for static constructs such as require() calls:

<?php
require_once(FUNCTIONS."/database.fnc");
require_once(
FUNCTIONS."/randchar.fnc");
?>

as well as dynamic constructs, typical of value assignment to variables:

<?php
$userid
= randchar(8,'anc','u');
$usermap = USERDIR."/".$userid.".png";
?>

The above convention works for me, and helps produce self-documenting code.

-- Erich
up
12
storm
18 years ago
An undefined constant evaluates as true when not used correctly. Say for example you had something like this:

settings.php
<?php
// Debug mode
define('DEBUG',false);
?>

test.php
<?php
include('settings.php');

if (
DEBUG) {
// echo some sensitive data.
}
?>

If for some reason settings.php doesn't get included and the DEBUG constant is not set, PHP will STILL print the sensitive data. The solution is to evaluate it. Like so:

settings.php
<?php
// Debug mode
define('DEBUG',0);
?>

test.php
<?php
include('settings.php');

if (
DEBUG == 1) {
// echo some sensitive data.
}
?>

Now it works correctly.
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