John Nichel wrote:
Jay Blanchard wrote:

[snip]
never want to use a variable to determine a constant
because the variable is not likely to be the same (that is why we call
them variables) on any iteration. Using constants in expressions is OK,
for instance

if(BAR == $foo){
   ...stuff...
}

But modifying a constant is a no-no.


I may be misunderstanding you here, but I don't see why you would not want to use a variable to define a constant. I do it from time to time, most common would be in a config document where I'll check if the page is being accessed via http or https, and define a constant based on that. I know I could use a variable for this, but I like using the constant for it's global scope in that case.


I do the same thing. Another thing I like about using "variable" constants in *some* cases is that they can't be reset to something else. So if I do something boneheaded in my application, it's not gonna screw everything up, or at least not leave me open to some kind of unforseen attack.

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