vote up 82 vote down star
119

EDIT: This didn't really start as a hidden features of PHP topic, but thats what it ended up as, so go nuts.


I know this sounds like a point-whoring question but let me explain where I'm coming from.

Out of college I got a job at a PHP shop. I worked there for a year and a half and thought that I had learned all there was to learn about programming.

Then I got a job as a one-man internal development shop at a sizable corporation where all the work was in C#. In my commitment to the position I started reading a ton of blogs and books and quickly realized how wrong I was to think I knew everything. I learned about unit testing, dependency injection and decorator patterns, the design principle of loose coupling, the composition over inheritance debate, and so on and on and on - I am still very much absorbing it all. Needless to say my programming style has changed entirely in the last year.

Now I find myself picking up a php project doing some coding for a friend's start-up and I feel completely constrained as opposed to programming in C#. It really bothers me that all variables at a class scope have to be referred to by appending '$this->' . It annoys me that none of the IDEs that I've tried have very good intellisense and that my SimpleTest unit tests methods have to start with the word 'test'. It drives me crazy that dynamic typing keeps me from specifying implicitly which parameter type a method expects, and that you have to write a switch statement to do method overloads. I can't stand that you can't have nested namespaces and have to use the :: operator to call the base class's constructor.

Now I have no intention of starting a PHP vs C# debate, rather what I mean to say is that I'm sure there are some PHP features that I either don't know about or know about yet fail to use properly. I am set in my C# universe and having trouble seeing outside the glass bowl.

So I'm asking, what are your favorite features of PHP? What are things you can do in it that you can't or are more difficult in the .Net languages?

flag
8  
Comedy answer: All of them. – Jack Ryan Jul 9 at 12:34
show 4 more comments

67 Answers

vote up 5 vote down

My list.. most of them fall more under the "hidden features" than the "favorite features" (I hope!), and not all are useful, but .. yeah.

// swap values. any number of vars works, obviously  
list($a, $b) = array($b, $a);

// nested list() calls "fill" variables from multidim arrays:  
$arr = array(  
  array('aaaa', 'bbb'),  
  array('cc', 'd')  
);  
list(list($a, $b), list($c, $d)) = $arr;  
echo "$a $b $c $d"; // -> aaaa bbb cc d  

// list() values to arrays  
while (list($arr1[], $arr2[], $arr3[]) = mysql_fetch_row($res)) { .. }  
// or get columns from a matrix  
foreach($data as $row) list($col_1[], $col_2[], $col_3[]) = $row;

// abusing the ternary operator to set other variables as a side effect:  
$foo = $condition ? 'Yes' . (($bar = 'right') && false) : 'No' . (($bar = 'left') && false);  
// boolean False cast to string for concatenation becomes an empty string ''.  
// you can also use list() but that's so boring ;-)  
list($foo, $bar) = $condition ? array('Yes', 'right') : array('No', 'left');

You can nest ternary operators too, comes in handy sometimes.

// the strings' "Complex syntax" allows for *weird* stuff.  
// given $i = 3, if $custom is true, set $foo to $P['size3'], else to $C['size3']:  
$foo = ${$custom?'P':'C'}['size'.$i];  
$foo = $custom?$P['size'.$i]:$C['size'.$i]; // does the same, but it's too long ;-)  
// similarly, splitting an array $all_rows into two arrays $data0 and $data1 based  
// on some field 'active' in the sub-arrays:  
foreach ($all_rows as $row) ${'data'.($row['active']?1:0)}[] = $row;

// slight adaption from another answer here, I had to try out what else you could  
// abuse as variable names.. turns out, way too much...  
$string = 'f.> <!-? o+';  
${$string} = 'asdfasf';  
echo ${$string}; // -> 'asdfasf'  
echo $GLOBALS['f.> <!-? o+']; // -> 'asdfasf'  
// (don't do this. srsly.)

${''} = 456;  
echo ${''}; // -> 456  
echo $GLOBALS['']; // -> 456  
// I have no idea.

Right, I'll stop for now :-)

link|flag
4  
You win the "writing illegible code" prize for the day. – fiXedd Jul 4 at 7:20
show 1 more comment
vote up 5 vote down

Range()
http://us.php.net/manual/en/function.range.php

This isn't hidden per se, but I still see a lot of people iterating with:

for ($i=0; $i < $x; $i++) { 
    # code...
}

when they could be using:

foreach (range(0, 12) as $number) {
    echo $number;
}

And you can do simple things like

foreach (range(date("Y"), date("Y")+20) as $i)
{
print "\t<option value=\"{$i}\">{$i}</option>\n";
}
link|flag
1  
you can do foreach ($array as $key=>$value) {} which is even simpler. – SilentGhost Jun 22 at 11:59
vote up 4 vote down

Built in filters for parsing variables against specific predefined types - as well as covering the basics (int/float etc), extends to covering emails, urls and even if a variable is a valid regular expression.

http://ch2.php.net/manual/en/book.filter.php

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Quick and dirty is the default.
The language is filled with useful shortcuts, This makes PHP the perfect candidate for (small) projects that that have a short time-to-market. Not that clean PHP code is impossible, it just takes some extra effort and experience.

But I love PHP because it lets me expres what i want without typing an essay.

PHP:

if (preg("cat","one cat")) {
   // do something
}

JAVA:

import java.util.regex.*;
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("cat");
Matcher m = p.matcher("one cat")
if (m.find()) {
  // do something
}

And yes, that includes not typing Int.

link|flag
4  
you should use strpos instead: if (false !== strpos("one cat", "cat")) { – OIS Apr 12 at 14:06
6  
@OIS the purpose of his example was to illustrate and compare the running of a quick regex match, not how to find the string "cat" in "one cat". – dcousineau Jun 23 at 21:24
vote up 4 vote down

Besides instance access to start coding away at anything you need for a website?

Besides magic methods and reflections, some interesting functions are:

  1. serialize / unserialize - state saving goodness via sql, cookies, processes, flatfile. good stuff.
  2. json_encode / json_decode - instant AJAX fun
  3. get_class - helpful for those weary loose-typing moments
  4. call_user_func_array - powerful when you can work with your code as strings (think dynamic)
  5. method_exists - reflection
  6. func_num_args / func_get_arg - unknown arguments ftw
  7. set_error_handler / set_exception_handler - very good debugging capabilities for a scripting language
link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Typecasting and the ctype_* functions become important to ensure clean data. I have made extensive use of exceptions lately, which has greatly simplified my error handling code.

I wouldn't say the language has lots of killer features. (At least, I don't find much occasion to seek them out.) I like that the language is unobtrusive.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 3 vote down

You can easily add an element to an array.

$my_array = array();
$my_array[] = 'first element';
$my_array[] = 'second element';

Element may be anything: object, array, scalar...

link|flag
show 4 more comments
vote up 3 vote down

specifying implicitly which parameter type a method expects

Actually, this one is partly possible (at least in PHP5) - you can specify the type for array and object parameters for functions and methods, though you are out of luck in case of scalar types.

class Bar
{
    public function __construct(array $Parameters, Bar $AnotherBar){}
}

Apart from this one and the magic methods Allain mentioned, I also find the interfaces provided by SPL (Standard PHP library) indispensible - you can implement the necessary methods in your class, for example, I particulary like the ArrayAccess and Iterator interfaces, that allow using an object like an associative array or iterating over it just like any simple array.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 3 vote down

Output buffering via ob_start() is far more useful than most realize. The first hidden feature here is that ob_start accepts a callback:

function twiterize($text) {
    // Replace @somename with the full twitter handle
    return preg_replace("(\s+)@(\w)+(\s+)", "http://www.twitter.com/${2}", $text);
}

ob_start(twiterize);

Secondly, you can nest output buffers... Using the previous example:

ob_start(parseTemplate);
 // ... 
 ob_start(twiterize);
   // ...
 ob_end_flush();
 // ... 
ob_end_flush();

Help contents, text ads, dictionary/index functionality, linkify, link-redirection for tracking purposes, templating engine, all these things are very easy by using different combinations of these 2 things

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 3 vote down

Well, I've recently delivered my first GUI application to a paying customer - written in PHP! It gathers data from a barcode reader or from GUI pushbuttons, checkboxes, radio buttons or text fields, stores to SQLite or remote MySQL, launches other Windows apps, sends zipped XML reports as email attachments, encrypts and decrypts stored data and even plays a sound when done.

Did it with miniPHP and Winbinder. Is that hidden enough? I guess not many PHP developers have really tried this out.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Include files can have a return value you can assign to a variable.

// config.php
return array(
    'db' => array(
        'host' => 'example.org',
        'user' => 'usr',
        // ...
    ),
    // ...
);

// index.php
$config = include 'config.php';
echo $config['db']['host']; // example.org
link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

I'm partial to the other PHP users out there. It's easy to get answers and direction when necessary.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

preg_split(), array_intersect(), and array_intersect_key().

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

This is great:

//file page_specific_funcs.inc

function doOtherThing(){

}

class MyClass{

}

//end file

//file.php

function doSomething(){
  include("page_specific_funcs.inc");

  $var = new MyClass(); 

}
//end of file.php

"page_specific_funcs.inc" file is only included if doSomething gets called. The declaration of classes, funcs, etc., inside methods works perfectly.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

The alternative syntax for control structures

There are a lot of people who don't know this syntax. When I use pure PHP for templating, this syntax offers a nice and clean way to mix simple control structures such as if or foreach with your HTML template code, usually combined with the <?= $myVar ?> short style of printing a variable.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

Using array elements or object properties inside strings.

Instead of writing

$newVar = $ar['foo']['bar'];
echo "Array value is $newVar";

$newVar = $obj->foo->bar;
echo "Object value is $newVar";

You can write:

echo "Array value is {$ar['foo']['bar']}";
echo "Object value is {$obj->foo->bar}";
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Ctype functions are faster than preg_match() for basic character validation.

ctype_alnum() — Check for alphanumeric character(s)
ctype_alpha() — Check for alphabetic character(s)
ctype_cntrl() — Check for control character(s)
ctype_digit() — Check for numeric character(s)
...etc...

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

I suggest using PHPUnit for unit testing, if you want to have annotations for marking your tests, and data providers, and data driven tests, and so on. Not to mention, it seems to get all the integration love when it comes to things like continuous integration (cruise control, bamboo, hudson, etc...).

PHP 5.3, it's a big jump, and it's throughly worth it in terms of language features. It maybe rough around the edges, but this is a startup and they'll be fixed up releases by the time you launch.

As far as magic methods go __invoke() alone is a big deal, but it doesn't have the reciprocal method for it, even then, paired with array_map, array_reduce, and array_filter, and some wrappers you can do some amazing functional programming.

__get, __set, and __call are really handy as well, I used these and some interface/class naming convention trickery to implement traits prior to 5.3, but now you have traits, as well.

Also have a look at the addendum library, written by derik rethans of ezComponents, and XDebug fame, it allows you to do annotations for php 5+. It's not bad, and performance is a non-issue with caching.

For profiling, you can use xdebug + webcachegrind.

The best IDE is probably the free eclipse PDT, if you use type hinting on parameters, and phpdoc comments for parameters and returns it can figure things out from those and provide you code completion. That should give you decent intellisense.

BTW, it's tempting to do all sorts of crazy string concats, or variable variables, or variable method calls, or variable class creation, do this in more than one place, that's not well documented and easy to search via regex, and you're SCREWED. Forget hard to debug, but refactoring is a major pain. This is something people rarely consider php has NO automated refactoring tools, and refactoring large code bases is VERY hard to do in php.

A few things to caution you, even if you smell the slightest bit of possibility that you might have to deal with multi-byte chars, or 'exotic' character encodings, I strongly urge you to wrap up string handling. In fact, introducing a thin layer of indirection which allows you to shim between or act as seams for testing/injectability between your code and built-ins will make your life easier. Not strictly necessary, but unless you have the benefit of foresight, it's hard to tackle internationalization or such large cross-cutting projects.

autoload, learn it and love it. Run away from hard coded require/includes, or worse, their *_once variants, they tie your hands in terms of injection, instead use an autoloader, simplest thing is to jam all your includes in a array, keyed on the class name, and the value is the file path from some root, it's fast. The wicked thing about this is that it makes testing really easy, as you've implemented a class loader, and so you can do some really neat stuff with it.

PHP 5.3 has name spaces now, jump for joy and use them like a mad man. This alone provides an opportunity to create seams (rare) for testing/injections.

Opcode caches, file accesses are slow, to avoid them, use an opcode cache, it's not just the file access, it's all the parsing, really. If you don't have to parse PER request, it makes a BIG difference. Even doing this for a front controller/interceptor will give you a lot of benefits.

Think different, one of the most troubling things for PHP programmers if they come from Java/.Net is that your application server is spread across PHP/Apache, or whatever web server you're using.

Phing/Ant/PHPMaven early on it seems easy just to jam everything in, but build scripts are still useful in php and they have some great support.

I had trouble with method overloading, and still contend with it. I came up with a pattern to alleviate a certain aspect of it. I often had many things that could fulfill a certain parameter, so when you document it @param mixed(int|array|fooObject) if those were the possibilities, I created a static method called Caster::CastTo($param, $toTypeAsString) that would just run through a case matching the type and trying to convert it to a known type. The rest of the method could then assume that one type, or a failure to convert, and work with that. And since I jammed ALL conversions in one class, it stopped mapping of types from being a cross cutting concern, and since these functions can be individually tested, I could test them once, and rely on them everywhere else.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

How extremely easy is to find PHP related things Examples, Applications, Classes, Documentation, Frameworks, etc...

All over the web, it's the easiest language to learn when going commando(by yourself), and also the one with more value for your time.

After learning PHP might put CMS with joomla, a blog with wordpress, etc....

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

well, the community is in first place for me. Whatever can your problem be, you'll always find someone who had it before and almost everytime a solution... and sometimes i've seen a completely free share of ideas, ways to approciate a single problem.

Im triyng to learn python now (to grow up as...well.. programmer, can thet be?) and the most usefull thing of python is the indentation. I love the php indentation, the $ mark for sign the variables, curly bracers for loops and cycles, well, those smart things keep my code very easly to understand (even if the one who's wrote the code was little..messy up.. 'spaghetti-code', mh?)

Arrays, in phph are pretty simple and powerfull.

Databases: mysql, postrgee, sql; you can use almost every kind of databases.. easly.

Quick: logically depends by how is the code wrote, but usually php is pretty fast for small/medium application (as it lose wheel in bigger application)

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Definitely the magic and overloading methods. Allain cited __get(), __set(), __call() and __toString(), but I also love __wakeup() and __sleep().

This magic methods are called when the object is serialized (sleep) and deserialized (wakeup). This feature ables making things like serializable Database-wrappers, which i am using in an application:

Class Connection {
   private $dsn;
   private $connection;
   ...
   public __wakeup() {
      $this->connection = ADONewConnection();
   }
}

In this way i can "save" connections in $_SESSION, etc.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I also like the difference between ' and ".

$foo = 'Bob';
echo 'My name is {$foo}'; // Doesn't swap the variable
echo "My name is {$foo}"; // Swaps the variable

Therefore, if your string doesn't need variable swapping, don't use a ", it's a waste of time. I see lots of people declaring strings with " all the time.

Note: I use { } as it makes my variables stand out more.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

I have started to switch over to python, and one thing I loved in python is the live interpreter. It wasn't until working on a php project later that I realized php does have this option, it's just not widely known. In a command prompt, type php -a and paste in any php code you want to test, but just remember to start it with <?php

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

filter_var function. Not a hidden pearl, but pretty new.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

GOOD:

  • The wide aceptance of PHP in WebHosting. Nearly every web-hosting service has PHP support.
  • Simple things can be solve with simple code. No classes or namespaces are strictly required.

BAD:

  • There is a ton of functions without any naming-convention. It is so hard to remember all these functions to use it effectively.
  • Bad coding habits, all over the web :(
link|flag
2  
Agree on Bad #1, but surely Bad #2 is not a fault of the language, it's a fault of the programmer? It is possible to write beautiful PHP... honest! – HoboBen Oct 12 '08 at 23:07
2  
There is plenty of awful code out there in every commonly used language. – steveth45 Feb 10 at 17:53
3  
I think what annoys me more than the inconsistent naming is the inconsistent ordering of arguments. For example string search functions - does haystack or needle come first? In some functions the order changed a long while back - also some functions accept them in either order for compatibility. – thomasrutter Mar 20 at 10:05
show 2 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

Let's see...

  1. Ternary operators. They work wonders for processing checkboxes in form results.

    $var = ($_POST['my_checkbox']=='checked') ? TRUE : FALSE;

  2. All of the wonderful string and array processing functions are worth trawling through. strtotime(), strlen(), and strpos() are a few of my favorites.

  3. The SimpleXML class and json_decode() function. Call a REST API or RSS feed with file_get_contents(), parse it effortlessly with one of those tools, and you're done.

link|flag
5  
I know it was just an example, but your code could have been: $var = ($_POST['my_checkbox'] == 'checked'); – Matt Kantor Jun 22 at 0:51
vote up 0 vote down

As far as i know, you can Implicit parameter type in function call:

function getInt(int $v)
{
     echo $v;
}

getInt(5); // will work
getInt('hello'); // will fail
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The json_encode/decode functions in php are pretty useful, though not very hidden.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

There's lots of gems hidden in the Standard PHP Library. Array access allows you to build an object that works to an array interface but add your own functionality on top.

Also when you create an ArrayAccess object by setting a flag in the constructor you can read and write an object as either an array or an object. Here's an example:

$obj = new ArrayObject(array("name"=>"bob", "email"=>"bob@example.com"),2);
$obj->fullname = "Bob Example";
echo $obj["fullname"];
$obj["fullname"]="Bobby Example";
echo $obj->fullname;
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I like the possibility of returning an array.

class House{
     function house(){
         ....
         return $house=array('wall'=>'brick','door'=>'maple');
     }

     function built(){
          ...
          $wall = $this->house['wall'];
     }
}
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.