208

What is the advantage of using heredoc in PHP, and can you show an example?

4
  • 4
    There is no strong reason alternates are better than heredocs Apr 15, 2011 at 6:55
  • 18
    I've edited this to be more constructive, and made the question community wiki as it is quite subjective. Note, The community may still close this, I elected to leave it open because you are getting quality answers.
    – user50049
    Apr 15, 2011 at 7:54
  • 9
    Why exactly is this question not considered constructive?
    – Ambo100
    Dec 28, 2016 at 16:25
  • heredocs is a godsend when I write PHP code that generates HTML and javascript, and I need to utilize variables to embed literal values within that generated code. regarding 'control structures', i perform that external to the heredoc block and embed the data accordingly
    – cloudxix
    Oct 7, 2022 at 0:25

5 Answers 5

231

The heredoc syntax is much cleaner to me and it is really useful for multi-line strings and avoiding quoting issues. Back in the day I used to use them to construct SQL queries:

$sql = <<<SQL
select *
  from $tablename
 where id in [$order_ids_list]
   and product_name = "widgets"
SQL;

To me this has a lower probability of introducing a syntax error than using quotes:

$sql = "
select *
  from $tablename
 where id in [$order_ids_list]
   and product_name = \"widgets\"
";

Another point is to avoid escaping double quotes in your string:

$x = "The point of the \"argument" was to illustrate the use of here documents";

The problem with the above is the syntax error (the missing escaped quote) I just introduced as opposed to here document syntax:

$x = <<<EOF
The point of the "argument" was to illustrate the use of here documents
EOF;

It is a bit of style, but I use the following as rules for single, double and here documents for defining strings:

  • Single quotes are used when the string is a constant like 'no variables here'
  • Double quotes when I can put the string on a single line and require variable interpolation or an embedded single quote "Today is ${user}'s birthday"
  • Here documents for multi-line strings that require formatting and variable interpolation.
11
  • 46
    Nitpick on your SQL example: You should not use double quotes within there in the first place. That only works with MySQL, and only when that server doesn't run in --ansi compliant mode. SQL strings must use single quotes.
    – mario
    Apr 15, 2011 at 7:27
  • 17
    @mario It was for illustration of the problem with using double quotes in general not about the specifics of the sql
    – Wes
    Apr 15, 2011 at 7:29
  • 4
    Not to say that placing variables into a query directly is a bad, bad manners :-P Apr 15, 2011 at 7:53
  • 5
    @Wes and @mario This is ANSI SQL : SELECT * FROM "order" WHERE "table"='1' Sep 5, 2013 at 7:32
  • 12
    "Not to say that placing variables into a query directly is a bad, bad manners". This is not true at all. Placing non-validated input into SQL statements is "bad manners". Placing variables inside SQL statements is sometimes necessary.
    – vogomatix
    Apr 11, 2016 at 13:53
74

Heredoc's are a great alternative to quoted strings because of increased readability and maintainability. You don't have to escape quotes and (good) IDEs or text editors will use the proper syntax highlighting.

A very common example: echoing out HTML from within PHP:

$html = <<<HTML
  <div class='something'>
    <ul class='mylist'>
      <li>$something</li>
      <li>$whatever</li>
      <li>$testing123</li>
    </ul>
  </div>
HTML;

// Sometime later
echo $html;

It is easy to read and easy to maintain.

The alternative is echoing quoted strings, which end up containing escaped quotes and IDEs aren't going to highlight the syntax for that language, which leads to poor readability and more difficulty in maintenance.

Updated answer for Your Common Sense

Of course you wouldn't want to see an SQL query highlighted as HTML. To use other languages, simply change the language in the syntax:

$sql = <<<SQL
       SELECT * FROM table
SQL;
9
  • 2
    Do you happen to know PHP's "escape from PHP" feature? Mar 13, 2012 at 15:56
  • 6
    Escaping from PHP is fine sometimes, but when you are echoing a lot of stuff, your syntax highlighting breaks, you have to type more characters by simple escaping from PHP and PHP has more commands to execute instead of a single echo. Also, you can set a Heredoc string to a variable and echo it later. Escaping PHP for your HTML means it gets printed out then and there. Can't save it for later. Mar 13, 2012 at 16:22
  • 2
    1. you can use output buffering to save the output. 2. You were using echo in your first example. 3. (good) IDE's or text editors NEVER break HTML highlighting when you are using escaping from PHP. 4. What IDE does syntax highlight for HEREDOC and what language rules used? Is it okay to see an SQL query highlighted as HTML text? Mar 13, 2012 at 16:31
  • 1
    The text editor I use, Sublime Text, does the proper Syntax highlighting just fine for Heredoc's. Regarding the language, I updated my answer to illustrate how to change the language for the Heredoc. It sounds like you have some reading to do regarding this topic. Not sure why you would downvote something without even understanding the basics of the topic... Mar 13, 2012 at 16:59
  • 11
    I think you misunderstand Heredoc's to only apply to strings of HTML. Heredoc's are simply an alternate way of defining a string, whether it be HTML or an SQL query or anything you want. They are easier to write and maintain, Wes's answer above shows that quite obviously (which if you note has the correct syntax highlighting. Don't complain to me about NetBeans failing). I'm not sure why you seem so bent on down-voting an answer on a community wiki question... Believe it or not, the original PHP developers may have included Heredoc's in PHP because it might actually be useful in some cases... Mar 13, 2012 at 19:31
9

Some IDEs highlight the code in heredoc strings automatically - which makes using heredoc for XML or HTML visually appealing.

I personally like it for longer parts of i.e. XML since I don't have to care about quoting quote characters and can simply paste the XML.

6

First of all, all the reasons are subjective. It's more like a matter of taste rather than a reason.

Personally, I find heredoc quite useless and use it occasionally, most of the time when I need to get some HTML into a variable and don't want to bother with output buffering, to form an HTML email message for example.

Formatting doesn't fit general indentation rules, but I don't think it's a big deal.

       //some code at it's proper level
       $this->body = <<<HERE
heredoc text sticks to the left border
but it seems OK to me.
HERE;
       $this->title = "Feedback";
       //and so on

As for the examples in the accepted answer, it is merely cheating.
String examples, in fact, being more concise if one won't cheat on them

$sql = "SELECT * FROM $tablename
        WHERE id in [$order_ids_list]
        AND product_name = 'widgets'";

$x = 'The point of the "argument" was to illustrate the use of here documents';
4

I don't know if I would say heredoc is laziness. One can say that doing anything is laziness, as there are always more cumbersome ways to do anything.

For example, in certain situations you may want to output text, with embedded variables without having to fetch from a file and run a template replace. Heredoc allows you to forgo having to escape quotes, so the text you see is the text you output. Clearly there are some negatives, for example, you can't indent your heredoc, and that can get frustrating in certain situation, especially if your a stickler for unified syntax, which I am.

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