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Posted by Zilla on 11/16/93 11:28
Pugi! wrote:
[snip]
> But much harder to accept is and I fail to see the logic in it,
> is the following :
> $i = 1;
> print($i++);
> This will print 1 and only afterward will the value of $i be increased
> by 1. It is between (), so logic tells me first $i++ and then print.
[snip]
print is a language construct, not actually a function. That means that
the parentheses are optional. So the following two lines produces the
same result:
print "Hello World";
print("Hello World");
So in your example the parentheses don't have a meaning in the
mathematical sense of doing whats inside them first, which in php only
works when you are calculating something as in:
$number = (3 + 5) * 7;
where $number is 56 (8 * 7). That is why $i in your example is still
post-incremented, that is, after you have printed it.
Hope you understand me.
Zilla.
PS.: Btw, you can pre-increment with ++$i
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