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I just saw the use of a backslash in a reference to a PHP object and was curious about it (I have never seen this before). What does it mean?

$mail = new SendGrid\Mail();

If you're curious, here's SendGrid's documentation.

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3 Answers 3

36

It's because they're using PHP namespaces. Namespaces are new as of PHP 5.3.

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19

It's PHP's namespace operator: http://php.net/manual/en/language.namespaces.php.

Don't ask why it's a backslash. It's (imho) the stupidest possible choice they could have made, basing their decisions on a highly slanted/bigoted scoring system that made sense only to the devs.

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  • 2
    Well, backslash was best available choice (would you want to use ::: or ->->?).
    – 0..
    May 28, 2012 at 17:33
  • That could work too, but ->Hello->something() would look ugly. And I don't think PHP would like having operator mean two things at once (especially so different, when I would see Abc->def() for first time I would think it's method of constant Abc).
    – 0..
    May 28, 2012 at 17:37
  • 16
    They shouldn't have used the dot operator for string concat, what a waste for a good namespace operator!
    – James Lin
    Jun 22, 2013 at 21:24
  • 7
    Check RFC wiki.php.net/rfc/namespaceseparator for how they chose Backslash. Aug 29, 2013 at 13:50
  • I'm so going to create an n namespace! But seriously... if you can separate folders and files with /, why not separate namespaces and classes with ::?
    – Erk
    Nov 10, 2016 at 6:23
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This is syntax for namespaces. You can read more about namespaces at PHP documentation. They they require at least PHP 5.3.

For example:

namespace SendGrid;
function Mail() {
    // You can access this function by using SendGrid\Mail() externally
}
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