php5 command line
Bjarne D Mathiesen
macintosh at mathiesen.info
Wed Dec 5 02:52:00 PST 2007
Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> On Dec 5, 2007, at 03:15, Michael Thon wrote:
>
...
>> Anyway, my solution is to add <?php to the files.
>
> Beginning PHP code fragments with "<?php" is the portable way to do it.
> This will work on every PHP interpreter. "<?", however, will only work
> if "short_open_tag" is set to "on" in the php.ini, and is therefore not
> recommended, since some installations may have it set to "off".
>
It's inadvisable to use the short form (<?) as it's ambiguous.
When coding webpages you can have both <?xml and <?php . If you are
allowing php short tags, your <?xml tags can be interpreted as php code,
which you definitely don't want.
Also, you'll have to use '<?php echo' instaed of the shorthand '<?=' in
your scripts.
see: http://php.net/ini.core
--
Bjarne D Mathiesen
København N ; Danmark ; Europa
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