1

I am really very surprised to see my function comes out to be undefined on AJAX request. I am wondering does function order matters in AJAX file? Following code will show you my problem -

This is the ajax.php file which is called by jquery/ajax request from index.php. It is supposed to simply print the name -

<?php
if(isset($_POST))
    {
        $name = 'admin';
        echo display_name($name);
        function display_name($name)
        {
            return $name;
        }
    }
?>

But when this file is called, i get -

Fatal error: Call to undefined function display_name() 

But when i change the order of code i.e. function like this -

<?php
if(isset($_POST))
    {
        $name = 'admin';
        function display_name($name)
        {
            return $name;
        }
        echo display_name($name);
    }
?>

then it displays -

admin

How strange it is!

Thus if really function availability order matters then how the following code works -

It is simple file and it is NOT called by AJAX request. I am simply loading the file and doesn't matter where the function is written. It is working by all using any order of line code -

<?php
$name = 'admin';
echo display_name($name);
function display_name($name)
{
    return $name;
}
?>

The following snippet is also working -

<?php
$name = 'admin';
function display_name($name)
{
    return $name;
}
echo display_name($name);
?>

So please tell my the reason behind this difference. In page loading code works and on ajax request it doesn't. Why the function display_name() is undefined if it exists?

1
  • How strange it is!??? If you fall from a skyscraper, you do not fall from bottom to top... or? Jul 25, 2014 at 11:55

2 Answers 2

5

This has nothing to do with Ajax.

From the PHP manual:

Functions need not be defined before they are referenced, except when a function is conditionally defined

The order matters in your first example because the function is inside an if statement.

0
1

I think this issue is not related to calling file as Ajax request. This is more related to PHP's function declaration scope.

Consider the following situation:

if(true)
{
    function bar()
    {

    }

    $functions = get_defined_functions();
    print_r($functions["user"]);
}

function foo()
{

}

this code will give bar and foo as defined functions.

But the following situation produces just foo function:

if(true)
{
    $functions = get_defined_functions();
    print_r($functions["user"]);

    function bar()
    {

    }
}

function foo()
{

}

From this we see that all the function in a file are defined and available imediately when the file is loaded, but if blocks are interpreted as the execution passes step by step.

Hope this helps.

0

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