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Possible Duplicate:
Opening/closing tags & performance?

This is a newbie question, but I could not find a clear answer on the net, so please don't laugh :)

  1. Does opening and closing php tags ( <? php code ?>) multiple times increases page load time?

  2. How about using include templatepath multiple times?

Thank you

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  • 1. yes, by a very very very small amount ( i think it looks ugly and is harder to maintain, so only ever open and close once) 2. ?
    – user557846
    Aug 7, 2012 at 19:58

2 Answers 2

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Does opening and closing php tags (<? php code ?>) multiple times increases page load time?

NO - I'm answering even though you've accepted, because everyone deserves to know what actually happens.

When PHP parses a file it tokenises everything outside of the tags as T_INLINE_HTML.

This is turned directly into a ZEND_ECHO

Closing and re-opening a tag is exactly the same speed as if you were echoing the html from within a single <?php ?> block.

How about using include templatepath multiple times?

Yes the more files you include, the longer it will take to load a page, especially if they have to be read from disk each time and you are not utilising various caching mechanisms.

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  1. Theoretically yes, but the difference is so miniscule that in almost all cases it wouldn't matter.

  2. Not sure about what you mean. If there is a possibility of a file being included multiple times, use include_once or require_once. This will prevent multiple loads and prevents errors like 'Cannot redeclare class'. Again this is more expensive than include and require, but more stable.

As a side note, your questions are not anything related to code, and I am sure these have already been asked and answered multiple times in SO, so please try to search/ask better next time :)

All the best!

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  • include(TEMPLATEPATH."/header.php"); and then use it for other files like link.php, footer.php - calling about 10 files
    – webmasters
    Aug 7, 2012 at 20:03
  • That doesn't have any additional performance issue. All you are doing is use a constant which contains the path to your resource files such as header, link, footer etc
    – raidenace
    Aug 7, 2012 at 20:07

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