I am taking over a project from an existing programmer who, to be honest, left the project in a massive heap of unmaintainable, unreadable mess (edit/clarification: dozens upon dozens of standalone .php pages that are a soup of php/html/css that all reference one giant 1500 line 'functions.php' file, ack)
That being said, it seems that pretty much everywhere there is a variable, array, etc. he used printf().
For example, instead of using:
foreach($thing as $t) {
echo "<option value='".$t."'>".$t."</option>";
}
He would use something like:
foreach($thing as $t) {
printf("<option value='%s'>%s</option>", $t, $t);
}
Does anyone have any insight as to why exactly he would do this? Is there some unknown benefit that I am not aware of by using printf() instead of echo/print?
Please note that this isn't just for values that might need to be validated/scrubbed, but for EVERYTHING. Data pulled from the database, random variables and arrays that were defined elsewhere, absolutely everything is printf() instead of just echo or print, and i'm trying to figure out why he would use this method as it might help me understand the logic behind some of the things he built.
''
) rather than a parsed string (""
) for a bit of extra performance, or at least control.printf
was substantially longer and more complex, while in actuality you were generating a more complex output with theprintf
version. Now they do the same thing, and you can see there is very little difference in the visual complexity of the line, possibly less.