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1

I know in php you can embed variables inside variables, like:

<? $var1 = "I\'m including {$var2} in this variable.."; ?>

But I was wondering how, and if it was possible to include a function inside a variable. I know I could just write:

<?php
    $var1 = "I\'m including ";
    $var1 .= somefunc();
    $var1 = " in this variable..";
?>

But what if I have a long variable for output, and I don't want to do that every time, or I want to use multiple functions:

<?php
    $var1 = <<<EOF
    <html lang="en">
    	<head>
    		<title>AAAHHHHH</title>
    		<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8">
    	</head>
    	<body>
    		There is <b>alot</b> of text and html here... but I want some <i>functions</i>!
    		-somefunc() doesn't work
    		-{somefunc()} doesn't work
    		-$somefunc() and {$somefunc()} doesn't work of course because a function needs to be a string
    		-more non-working: ${somefunc()}
    	</body>
    </html>
EOF;
?>

Or I want dynamic changes in that load of code:

<?
    function somefunc($stuff){
    	$output = "my bold text <b>{$stuff}</b>.";
    	return $output;
    }

    $var1 = <<<EOF
    <html lang="en">
    	<head>
    		<title>AAAHHHHH</title>
    		<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8">
    	</head>
    	<body>
    		somefunc("is awesome!") 
    		somefunc("is actually not so awesome..") 
    		because somefunc("won\'t work due to my problem.")
    	</body>
    </html>
EOF;
?>

Well?

flag
<? $var1 = "I\'m including {$var2} in this variable.."; ?> Why are you escaping a single quote inside double quotes? ;) – Till Sep 13 '08 at 9:08

3 Answers

vote up 16 vote down check

Function calls within strings are supported since PHP5 by having a variable containing the name of the function to call:

<?
function somefunc($stuff)
{
    $output = "<b>{$stuff}</b>";
    return $output;
}
$somefunc='somefunc';
echo "foo {$somefunc("bar")} baz";
?>

will output "foo <b>bar</b> baz".

I find it easier however (and this works in PHP4) to either just call the function outside of the string:

<?
echo "foo " . somefunc("bar") . " baz";
?>

or assign to a temporary variable:

<?
$bar = somefunc("bar");
echo "foo {$bar} baz";
?>
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1  
I guess that works, but I'd never do that. It's screaming bad practice. Think about code readability etc.. Come back to your code in six months and figure out all the function calls inside your HTML markup. – Till Sep 13 '08 at 8:57
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Expanding a bit on what Jason W said:

I find it easier however (and this works in PHP4) to either just call the 
function outside of the string:

<?
echo "foo " . somefunc("bar") . " baz";
?>

You can also just embed this function call directly in your html, like:

<?

function get_date() {
        $date = `date`;
        return $date;
}

function page_title() {
        $title = "Today's date is: ". get_date() ."!";
        echo "$title";
}

function page_body() {
        $body = "Hello";
        $body = ",  World!";
        $body = "\n
\n"; $body = "Today is: " . get_date() . "\n"; } ?> <html> <head> <title><? page_title(); ?></title> </head> <body> <? page_body(); ?> </body> </html>
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example assumes you have short tags enabled – Allain Lalonde Sep 15 '08 at 2:15
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"bla bla bla".function("blub")." and on it goes"

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