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In my php files, I wonder if the opening and closing tags have a performance impact.

ie.

<?php echo 'Hello world'; ?>
<?php echo 'Hello world'; ?>
<?php echo 'Hello world'; ?>
<?php echo 'Hello world'; ?>
<?php echo 'Hello world'; ?>

vs.

<?php
  echo 'Hello world';
  echo 'Hello world';
  echo 'Hello world';
  echo 'Hello world';
  echo 'Hello world';
?>

If so, what is the impact?

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  • 8
    Not measurably. Write code so you can read and maintain it. Parser optimizations are micro optimizations that are not worth your time, in general.
    – Brad
    Feb 13, 2014 at 19:12
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    I doubt there will ever be real life situations where this will be important.
    – Mihai
    Feb 13, 2014 at 19:15
  • 3
    possible duplicate of Opening/closing tags & performance?
    – salathe
    Feb 13, 2014 at 19:57
  • 3
    everyone who thinks this is primarily open based is using their opinion to shut down a legit question. great job guys.
    – albert
    Feb 13, 2014 at 20:56
  • 1
    @albert: then re-open it and close it as a duplicate of the link posted directly above it. Either way, it's not good content (either poor, or duplicate, both of which are problematic on a site of this scale)...
    – ircmaxell
    Feb 13, 2014 at 22:18

2 Answers 2

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Does it have a performance impact? Yes. Simply because there is more text for the parser to parse. It must have an impact. And yes, it will have a measurable impact.

Does it have a meaningful impact? No. Not at all. You would be hard pressed to see any difference even if you had millions of them in your app. Yes, there will be more clock cycles used, but trivially...

The bigger thing is to note that the two pieces of code are not identical in general. PHP will strip a single new line after a closing ?>, but any other characters after ?> will render in the output. So trailing spaces or multiple newlines after ?> will be rendered directly.

So my suggestion is ignore the performance, write the correct and more readable code (the more semantically correct code). And ignore small performance differences...

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  • 2
    No, they'll both produce the second version, because there is no \n on any output.
    – Phil Perry
    Feb 13, 2014 at 19:26
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    @PhilPerry In this particular case, yes, because the newline is stripped by the parser with ?>, but if there was a second newline or a space, then it would be rendered. Answer updated.
    – ircmaxell
    Feb 13, 2014 at 19:33
  • Pro Tip: <?= is shorthand for <?php echo and is NOT the same as short tags. Just putting that out there as this question touches on readability and templating.
    – Will
    Feb 13, 2014 at 22:03
  • @MobyD: they are the same (<?="foo"?> is literally identical to <?php echo "foo"; ?>). Proof in Opcodes...
    – ircmaxell
    Feb 13, 2014 at 22:04
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I would say consolidate inside PHP wrappers as much as possible without sacrificing readability/functionality. Unless you specifically have a reason to break (or use) PHP (such as to enter a decent amount of HTML), why do it?

The performance impact is minimal, and it's all server side anyway. You can test your page load times if you're really concerned, but I would wager the time it takes to test it is exponential to the actual load it would add.

Take for example:

<?php
  $foo = 'writing code';
  echo "<h1 class=\"hstyle4\">Hello World</h1>";
  echo "<p>I am {$foo}, specifically HTML, inside of PHP using echo.";
  echo 'but I could just as easily have broken it into html and used only what I needed.</p>';
?>

Versus

<?php $foo = 'writing code'; ?>
<h1 class="hstyle4">Hello World</h1>
<p>I am <?php echo $foo; ?>, specifically HTML, outside of PHP. It's probably a lot more readable this way, and doesn't impact the server nearly as much by parsing unnecessary code that could have easily been handled another way.</p> 
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  • You are "right", but probably not for the reason you think (or thought, 3 years ago when you answered). Preface: making decisions based on the following info, and not the way the code reads, is micro-optimizing, which is the root of all evil; don't do it. Each of these examples will translate to one ASSIGN instruction, and three ECHO instructions. However, the first example, because it uses interpolation, also requires a string to be generated first, which is what makes it more complex. first opcodes vs last opcodes.
    – Dereleased
    Jun 16, 2017 at 20:43

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