I've just read the page on Expressions in the PHP docs, and right at the top it says:
The simplest yet most accurate way to define an expression is "anything that has a value".
That simple definition includes all functions and most language constructs, however there a few language constructs that explicitly state they do not return a value.
Here is a list of language constructs that do return a value:
empty
eval
include
include_once
isset
list
require
require_once
print
Here are the interesting few which do not return a value, and therefore are not expressions:
die
echo
exit
return
unset
__halt_compiler
I find die and exit of particular interest, because they can be used as expressions in PHP despite having no return values. The following lines of code all throw a syntax error, as expected:
echo 'Hi' or echo 'Bye';
if(echo('foo'))
return return(1);
$foo['bar'] = isset($foo['bar']) ? unset($foo['bar']) : 0;
if(unset($foo['bar']))
__halt_compiler() or die;
However the following PHP code is completely free of syntax errors:
print 'Hi' or print 'Bye'; // Makes sense, print returns a value
if(!die() and exit) // Wait what's happening here?
quit(die(exit(quit()))); // die and exit don't have return values (does quit?)
$x = true ? die/2 : 5*exit();
$y = pow(die,7);
isset($_GET['bar']) or die(); // This one is actually pretty commonly used.
function quit(){
return exit;
}
I've looked through the PHP docs and can't find any mention of this special treatment of die() and exit(). Do any PHP experts know if this is documented anywhere. Is this intended behaviour, and is the isset($_GET['bar']) or die(); pattern safe to use; could it suddenly break in a future version of PHP?
PHP does not detect errors except at run time when the code path is reached. Unlike many other languages, it does not list the errors when the page is "compiled" - so you'll only see errors as their respective lines of source code are executed.
In your example, the evaluation of the return value of exit or die is never done. PHP doesn't report an error because it never tried to evaluate the result in the first place, because the thread exited.
die and exit (they share the T_EXIT token) fall under the rules for expr_without_variable during the parsing phase, which is why PHP is happy to have them in an expression context without giving a syntax error.
Do any PHP experts know if this is documented anywhere.
There is no description of the special treatment in the PHP manual, however the first example on the exit manual page shows it being used as … or exit.
Is this intended behaviour, and is the isset($_GET['bar']) or die(); pattern safe to use; could it suddenly break in a future version of PHP?
Yes. Yes. Anything's possible, however unlikely.
A wild guess is that die and exit do return a value, however, it will never be returned since the execution is halted before it is returned.
This might have been implemented in order to add some "usefulness" to the die and exit functions.
die and exit return value, however that value have to be used by the program that has called the PHP script. This comment describes the behavior.
Related
In PHP, you can handle errors by calling or die to exit when you encounter certain errors, like this:
$handle = fopen($location, "r") or die("Couldn't get handle");
Using die() isn't a great way to handle errors. I'd rather return an error code so the parent function can decide what to do, instead of just ending the script ungracefully and displaying the error to the user.
However, PHP shows an error when I try to replace or die with or return, like this:
$handle = fopen($location, "r") or return 0;
Why does or die() work, but not or return 0?
I want to thank you for asking this question, since I had no idea that you couldn't perform an or return in PHP. I was as surprised as you when I tested it. This question gave me a good excuse to do some research and play around in PHP's internals, which was actually quite fun. However, I'm not an expert on PHP's internals, so the following is a layman's view of the PHP internals, although I think it's fairly accurate.
or return doesn't work because return isn't considered an "expression" by the language parser - simple as that.
The keyword or is defined in the PHP language as a token called T_LOGICAL_OR, and the only expression where it seems to be defined looks like this:
expr T_LOGICAL_OR { zend_do_boolean_or_begin(&$1, &$2 TSRMLS_CC); } expr { zend_do_boolean_or_end(&$$, &$1, &$4, &$2 TSRMLS_CC); }
Don't worry about the bits in the braces - that just defines how the actual "or" logic is handled. What you're left with is expr T_LOGICAL_OR expr, which just says that it's a valid expression to have an expression, followed by the T_LOGICAL_OR token, followed by another expression.
An expr is also defined by the parser, as you would expect. It can either be a r_variable, which just means that it's a variable that you're allowed to read, or an expr_without_variable, which is a fancy way of saying that an expression can be made of other expressions.
You can do or die() because the language construct die (not a function!) and its alias exit are both represented by the token T_EXIT, and T_EXIT is considered a valid expr_without_variable, whereas the return statement - token T_RETURN - is not.
Now, why is T_EXIT considered an expression but T_RETURN is not? Honestly, I have no clue. Maybe it was just a design choice made just to allow the or die() construct that you're asking about. The fact that it used to be so widely used - at least in things like tutorials, since I can't speak to a large volume of production code - seems to imply that this may have been an intentional choice. You would have to ask the language developers to know for sure.
With all of that said, this shouldn't matter. While the or die() construct seemed ubiquitous in tutorials (see above) a few years ago, it's not really recommended, since it's an example of "clever code". or die() isn't a construct of its own, but rather it's a trick which uses - some might say abuses - two side-effects of the or operator:
it is very low in the operator precedence list, which means practically every other expression will be evaluated before it is
it is a short-circuiting operator, which means that the second operand (the bit after the or) is not executed if the first operand returns TRUE, since if one operand is TRUE in an or expression, then they both are.
Some people consider this sort of trickery to be unfavourable, since it is harder for a programmer to read yet only saves a few characters of space in the source code. Since programmer time is expensive, and disk space is cheap, you can see why people don't like this.
Instead, you should be explicit with your intent by expanding your code into a full-fledged if statement:
$handle = fopen($location, "r");
if ($handle) {
// process the file
} else {
return 0;
}
You can even do the variable assignment right in the if statement. Some people still find this unreadable, but most people (myself included) disagree:
if ($handle = fopen($location, "r")) {
// process the file
} else {
return 0;
}
One last thing: it is convention that returning 0 as a status code indicates success, so you would probably want to return a different value to indicate that you couldn't open the file.
Return is fairly special - it cannot be anything like a function since it's a tool to exit functions. Imagine this:
if(1==1) return(); // say what??
If it was like this, return would have to be a function that does a "double exit", leaving not just its own scope but the caller's, too. Therefore return is nothing like an expression, it simply can't work that way.
Now in theory, return could be an expression that evaluates to (say) false and then quits the function; maybe a later php version will implement this.
The same thing applies to goto which would be a charm to work as a fallback; and yes, fallbacks are necessary and often make the code readable, so if someone complains about "clever code" (which certainly is a good point) maybe php should have some "official" way to do such a thing:
connectMyDB() fallback return false;
Something like try...catch, just more to the point. And personally, I'd be a lot happier with "or" doing this job since it's working well with English grammar: "connect or report failure".
TLDR: you're absolutely right: return, goto, break - none of them works. Easy to understand why but still annoying.
I've also stumbled upon that once. All I could find was this:
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=40712
Look at the comment down below:
this is not a bug
I've searched in the documentation and I think it's due to the fact that return 0 is a statement whereas die() is essentially an expression. You can't run $handle = return 0; but $handle = fun(); is valid code.
Regarding error handling I would recommend custom codes or using custom handlers and triggers. The latter are described here for example.
Seeing the exit() PHP documentation got me thinking:
$filename = '/path/to/data-file';
$file = fopen($filename, 'r')
or exit("unable to open file ($filename)");
Couple questions:
What are common use cases besides opening files for using exit()?
Since not every function everyone ever writes ends in exit(), how do you know to use it in some contexts vs. others?
Are if/else and or/exit interchangeable?
In that context, the or in that statement is one of PHP's logical operators which when used like that, will execute the second statement if and only if the first one fails due to short circuit evaluation.
Since fopen returned false, the or exit statement gets executed since the first part failed.
To understand it better, here is a quick explanation of short-circuit evaluation.
$x = 5;
$y = 42;
if ($x == 5 or $y == 42) {
echo "x or y is true";
}
In the above code, the expression $y == 42 is never evaluated because there is no need since the first expression was true.
In that example, they are using the same logic for deciding whether or not to evaluate the statement that calls exit.
To address your questions:
I wouldn't use exit when opening a file failed unless the program was very specific. The better thing to do would be to log an error and then return the error to the caller so they can decide what to do.
When to use exit completely depends on the code you are writing.
Given the explanation about short-circuiting, yes they are interchangeable in that sense. Using or exit is just a bit shorter than using if/else.
Hope that helps.
CLI scripts, exit can take an integer parameter which is fed back to the console to indicate success or some form of error
I'm not inclined to use exit() or die() in application code, since exceptions are preferred. However, I personally think you might be overcomplicating things a little bit... it kills script execution, so use it when you need to kill a script. Truthfully I mostly only ever kill scripts mid-execution when debugging (one-off breakpoints) and that's not ideal either (again exceptions do a better job).
The use of or is mostly convenient. Here's an interesting point though...
Why does
$resource = mysql_connect() || die('dead')
not work?
The answer is that the = operator takes precedence over or so that the assignment is made first like so: ($resource = mysql_connect()) or die(). In this way its exactly like doing an if(!($resource = mysql_connnect())) { die() }
I tend to avoid using exit() at all as it's a really ugly way to handle errors from the user's perspective.
If you must use it, any non recoverable error would be a candidate. For example, database query or connection failures, or remote request failures.
if/else is equivalent to ...or whatever(). It's just a style thing, with the latter form being more succinct.
I would say you use exit in a situation where your code cannot continue if the function you were doing failed. For example reading a file that is needed.
I've just read the page on Expressions in the PHP docs, and right at the top it says:
The simplest yet most accurate way to define an expression is "anything that has a value".
That simple definition includes all functions and most language constructs, however there a few language constructs that explicitly state they do not return a value.
Here is a list of language constructs that do return a value:
empty
eval
include
include_once
isset
list
require
require_once
print
Here are the interesting few which do not return a value, and therefore are not expressions:
die
echo
exit
return
unset
__halt_compiler
I find die and exit of particular interest, because they can be used as expressions in PHP despite having no return values. The following lines of code all throw a syntax error, as expected:
echo 'Hi' or echo 'Bye';
if(echo('foo'))
return return(1);
$foo['bar'] = isset($foo['bar']) ? unset($foo['bar']) : 0;
if(unset($foo['bar']))
__halt_compiler() or die;
However the following PHP code is completely free of syntax errors:
print 'Hi' or print 'Bye'; // Makes sense, print returns a value
if(!die() and exit) // Wait what's happening here?
quit(die(exit(quit()))); // die and exit don't have return values (does quit?)
$x = true ? die/2 : 5*exit();
$y = pow(die,7);
isset($_GET['bar']) or die(); // This one is actually pretty commonly used.
function quit(){
return exit;
}
I've looked through the PHP docs and can't find any mention of this special treatment of die() and exit(). Do any PHP experts know if this is documented anywhere. Is this intended behaviour, and is the isset($_GET['bar']) or die(); pattern safe to use; could it suddenly break in a future version of PHP?
PHP does not detect errors except at run time when the code path is reached. Unlike many other languages, it does not list the errors when the page is "compiled" - so you'll only see errors as their respective lines of source code are executed.
In your example, the evaluation of the return value of exit or die is never done. PHP doesn't report an error because it never tried to evaluate the result in the first place, because the thread exited.
die and exit (they share the T_EXIT token) fall under the rules for expr_without_variable during the parsing phase, which is why PHP is happy to have them in an expression context without giving a syntax error.
Do any PHP experts know if this is documented anywhere.
There is no description of the special treatment in the PHP manual, however the first example on the exit manual page shows it being used as … or exit.
Is this intended behaviour, and is the isset($_GET['bar']) or die(); pattern safe to use; could it suddenly break in a future version of PHP?
Yes. Yes. Anything's possible, however unlikely.
A wild guess is that die and exit do return a value, however, it will never be returned since the execution is halted before it is returned.
This might have been implemented in order to add some "usefulness" to the die and exit functions.
die and exit return value, however that value have to be used by the program that has called the PHP script. This comment describes the behavior.
I believe that all of these (and even die() or die(0)) are identical. If they are not identical, which is preferred for exiting a script successfully? If they are identical, is there any preferred standard to indicate successful script completion? I tend to use exit;.
EDIT: All of the answers have "die() and exit() are identical" even though I say that in my question. I updated to the title to hopefully make it clearer that this is NOT my question. I want to clearly indicate success from a command line script.
These are all identical. I'm pretty sure die() is just a straight-up alias to exit(), but even if it isn't, it still acts identically.
When one of these functions is given a string argument, it prints out the string before terminating the process. When it encounters an integer under 255, that integer is considered the return code for the process, which gets passed back to the process which invoked the PHP script. This is particularly useful when writing command line applications (PHP isn't web-only!).
As far as the difference between exit, exit(), and exit(0), there really is none. There is definitely no difference between the first two because exit is technically a language construct, not a function, so it can be called with or without parentheses, just like echo. Returning a code of 0 means "this program ran successfully/without errors", and while I don't know what exactly happens when you don't pass an argument, PHP.net says that an argument-less exit indicates success, so I would bet it returns 0, though again PHP.net doesn't show a default for the argument.
As several people have mentioned, die() and exit() are exactly the same.
If you look at the PHP documentation, there are two options for arguments:
An numeric value. This is only useful if you are using PHP from the command line, as opposed to a web server. A value of zero indicates success. Nonzero indicates a failure condition occurred.
A string value. This will be displayed to the browser when the exit occurs.
Instead of die() or exit(), I recommend using exceptions and a custom top-level exception handler to manage failure conditions.
You have more flexibility that way to do things like automatic error logging. Also, if you're using PHP to implement a JSON API, this exception handler can hand back a valid, error-indicating JSON snippet instead.
I would say that in regards with a better semantics die($arg); should be used for an abnormal or unexpected termination, even when -of course- you still have caught it. And exit($arg); should be used for a normal (expected / controlled) end of a process, like in break; for a for or while or a switch structure but with a definitive end.
Nevertheless .. I personally often use a general if { } else { } structure to control different branches of huge processes or output buffering so not having to use "exit" ..
I also use die($arg) in simple error-catching semantics like in
$db = mysql_connect([$args]) or die ($error); ...
die(); is just a synonym for exit(); and is functionally identical.
The standard way is to use exit code zero to signify success, and anything else to denote an error condition.
die() is typically used to kill the script with an error output:
die("There was a fatal error");
where-as exit is typically used as a successful exit (At least in my coding)
The PHP Manual says that the functions are identical.
I will get downvoted to hell, but in some cases when hacking in CLI, we do not want the program to get killed, while not wanting to continue the full execution.
Here the goal is to avoid making api calls to a separate hand-point file. Say I have a nice play button in my interface, that execute system calls.
Example 1: The program get killed after the job , no datas returned. This is not wanted.
if ($_GET["play"] != ""){
// Some job
exit;
}
/* Huge amount of data*/
Example 2: The program still runs, feeding the whole data in the GET request. This is unnecessary on this case. This is slowing down the browser with all the data, that he has already.
if ($_GET["play"] != ""){
// Some job
}
/* Huge amount of data*/
Example 3: The program still runs, no data returned as expected, the play command had been executed, but the whole data set get parsed, this is unnecessary job, can slow down php/the machine.
/* Huge amount of data*/
if ($_GET["play"] != ""){
// Some job
}
Example 4: The program still runs, no data returned as expected, the play command had been executed, the whole data had not been parsed, php returned super quickly 200OK with an empty response, as expected. Everyone happy!
if ($_GET["play"] != ""){
// Some job
goto END;
}
/* Huge amount of data*/
END;
Yes! Using GOTO, sometimes is to be considered -as the best to do 🔨 -!
https://www.php.net/manual/en/control-structures.goto.php
die is exactly equivalent to exit.
From the manual:
If status is an integer, that value will be used as the exit status..
This is only useful if you have some sort of wrapper that does something based on the exit status. Unless you have a specific need to report an exit code to the outside world, just exit;.
I have seen some code do this:
if(something){
echo 'exit from program';
die;
}
...more code
And others that just use die:
if(something) die('exit from program');
...more code
Is there any inherent difference in when it would end the program, should I be aware of the code that comes after it? etcetera
UPDATE
I am asking mainly, if it is a coding style, or if there is a real reason why some is coded one way versus another. I am not asking what the difference between exit and die is.
No, there is no difference; they will both write "exit" to STDOUT and terminate the program.
I would prefer the die("exit") method as it's less typing, easier to comment out and semantically clearer.
As far as "speed", why would you care which is faster? Do you need your program to die really quickly?
RE: Your update
... any inherent difference in when it would end the program ...
There is no difference, inherent or otherwise. They're identical. The second option, die('exit'), is a single statement, and so requires no braces when used with an if statement; this has nothing to do with the die and everything to do with blocks and flow control in C-style languages.
RE: Your comment/second update
Which way you die is a matter of personal preference. As I said, they are identical. I would choose the 2nd option for the reasons listed above: Shorter, clearer, cleaner, which amounts to "better" in my opinion.
The difference between exit and die is that exit allows you to return a non-zero status, while die returns 0. Neither function is "better", they serve different purposes.
no difference.
And why asking for speed difference since you're dieing.
There IS a difference guys. DIE() can be used with other failable functions whereas echoing would need to caught as an error or exception.
$query = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM tablename") OR DIE(mysql_error());
Gives you an immediate catch/die sequence.
For the specific example you posted they are equal, since the $status is a string, but as the manual says this may not always be the case:
If status is a string, this function
prints the status just before exiting.
If status is an integer, that value
will be used as the exit status and
not printed. Exit statuses should be
in the range 0 to 254, the exit status
255 is reserved by PHP and shall not
be used. The status 0 is used to
terminate the program successfully.
So if instead of 'exit from program' you wanted to output, say 42 you would really need to do:
echo 42; die();
The language constructs exit() and die() are equivalent, at least according to the PHP manual. I use exit() when that line should be reached and I want the script to stop at that point. Die() on the other hand is for situations that should not occur. That's just what feels most natural for me, you don't have to agree.
Mostly it's coding style. However, if you are outputting debug messages, echo then die is better:
echo "The frobnuticator blew up!";
die;
becomes
//echo "The frobnusticator blew up!";
die;
Of course, you'd most likely have
if ($debug) echo "The frobnusticator blew up!";
die;
Which is much easier on (my|the) eye than
die($debug?"The frobnusticator blew up!":"");
From php manual :
Note: This language construct is equivalent to die().
But still there are difference between die and exit :
Using die() you can post a string : die("An error occurred");
Same result with using exit()
<?php
echo("An error occurred <br>");
exit(0);
?>
OR if you are cli or unix shell :
Using PHP on the command line, die("An error occurred") simply prints "An error occurred" to STDOUT and terminates the program with a normal exit code of 0.
<?php
fwrite(STDERR, "An error occurred \n");
exit(0); //
?>