2009/10/28 Warren Vail <war...@vailtech.net>:
> The curly braces look like something from the smarty template engine.
>
> Warren Vail

Odd. I always thought the curly braces in the Smarty engine looked
like something from PHP. :)


Torben

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Kim Madsen [mailto:php....@emax.dk]
> Sent: Wednesday, October 28, 2009 10:18 AM
> To: Nick Cooper
> Cc: Jim Lucas; php-general@lists.php.net
> Subject: Re: [PHP] PHP String convention
>
> Hi Nick
>
> Nick Cooper wrote on 2009-10-28 17:29:
>
>> Thank you for the quick replies. I thought method 2 must be faster
>> because it doesn't have to search for variables in the string.
>>
>> So what is the advantages then of method 1 over 3, do the curly braces
>> mean anything?
>>
>> 1) $string = "foo{$bar}";
>>
>> 2) $string = 'foo'.$bar;
>>
>> 3) $string = "foo$bar";
>>
>> I must admit reading method 1 is easier, but writing method 2 is
>> quicker, is that the only purpose the curly braces serve?
>
> Yes, you're right about that. 10 years ago I went to a seminar were
> Rasmus Lerforf was speaking and asked him exactly that question. The
> single qoutes are preferred and are way faster because it doesn´t have
> to parse the string, only the glued variables.
>
> Also we discussed that if you´re doing a bunch of HTML code it's
> considerably faster to do:
>
> <tr>
>   <td><?= $data ?></td>
> </tr>
>
> Than
> print "
> \n\t<tr>
>   \n\t\t<td>$data</td>
> \n\t</tr>";
>
> or
> print '
> <tr>
>   <td>'.$data.'</td>
> </tr>';
>
> I remember benchmark testing it afterwards back then and there was
> clearly a difference.
>
> --
> Kind regards
> Kim Emax - masterminds.dk
>
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