Variable scope difference between PHP and C: block scope is not exactly the same?
The following PHP code will output 3.
function main() {
if (1) {
$i = 3;
}
开发者_StackOverflow社区 echo $i;
}
main();
But the following C code will raise a compile error.
void main() {
if (1) {
int i = 3;
}
printf("%d", i);
}
So variables in PHP are not strictly block-scoped? In PHP, variables defined in inner block can be used in outer block?
PHP only has function scope - control structures such as if don't introduce a new scope. However, it also doesn't mind if you use variables you haven't declared. $i won't exist outside of main() or if the if statement fails, but you can still freely echo it.
If you have PHP's error_reporting set to include notices, it will emit an E_NOTICE error at runtime if you try to use a variable which hasn't been defined. So if you had:
function main() {
if (rand(0,1) == 0) {
$i = 3;
}
echo $i;
}
The code would run fine, but some executions will echo '3' (when the if succeeds), and some will raise an E_NOTICE and echo nothing, as $i won't be defined in the scope of the echo statement.
Outside of the function, $i will never be defined (because the function has a different scope).
For more info: http://php.net/manual/en/language.variables.scope.php
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