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Comentarios> <Sintaxis básica
Last updated: Fri, 22 Aug 2008

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Separación de instrucciones

Las separación de instrucciones se hace de la misma manera que en C o Perl - terminando cada declaración con un punto y coma.

La etiqueta de fin de bloque (?>) implica el fin de la declaración, por lo tanto lo siguiente es equivalente:

<?php
    
echo "This is a test";
?>

<?php echo "This is a test" ?>



Comentarios> <Sintaxis básica
Last updated: Fri, 22 Aug 2008
 
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Separación de instrucciones
Darabos, Edvrd Konrd
19-Aug-2008 01:58
One newline character (or sequence) is dropped out by the parser after "?>", so you can add the beloved "final newline" to your file after "?>"

Example for plain text outputs:

<? foreach($array as $elem){ ?>
Value: <?=$elem?>

<? } ?>

(You have to add an extra enter after <?=$elem?> if you want to see a newline in the output.
james dot d dot noyes at lmco dot com
05-May-2008 09:42
If you are embedding this in XML, you had better place the ending '?>' there or the XML parser will puke on you.  XML parsers do not like processing instructions without end tags, regardless of what PHP does.

If you're doing HTML like 90% of the world, or if you are going to process/interpret the PHP before the XML parser ever sees it, then you can likely get away with it, but it's still not best practice for XML.
Sam H
18-Apr-2008 10:17
Best not to exclude ?> ever, just for code cleanliness' sake.
Krishna Srikanth
17-Aug-2006 02:44
Do not mis interpret

<?php echo 'Ending tag excluded';

with

<?php echo 'Ending tag excluded';
<
p>But html is still visible</p>

The second one would give error. Exclude ?> if you no more html to write after the code.

Comentarios> <Sintaxis básica
Last updated: Fri, 22 Aug 2008
 
 
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