28

i'm writing this:

echo "foo";
echo "\n";
echo "bar";

and "bar" is not written in the line below.

What am i doing wrong?

Javi

2
  • 10
    using browser to check output? Apr 20, 2010 at 11:42
  • 1
    Did you View source if you are using a browser? That is where the newline would show, in just the source code. Also, what OS are you using? Some require an \r\n. Apr 20, 2010 at 11:52

15 Answers 15

46

Newlines in HTML are expressed through <br>, not through \n.

Using \n in PHP creates a newline in the source code, and HTML source code layout is unconnected to HTML screen layout.

1
  • Does that means that $message = "my name \n is TheBump"; echo $message; my name is TheBump ?? Jul 28, 2015 at 0:40
20

If you want a new line character to be inserted into a plain text stream then you could use the OS independent global PHP_EOL

echo "foo";
echo PHP_EOL ;
echo "bar";

In HTML terms you would see a newline between foo and bar if you looked at the source code of the page.

ergo, it is useful if you are outputting say, a loop of values for a select box and you value having html source code which is "prettier" or easier to read for yourself later. e.g.

foreach( $dogs as $dog )
echo "<option>$dog</option>" . PHP_EOL ;
4
  • I'd say echo "<option>$dog</option>\n"; is way readable than yours Apr 20, 2010 at 12:01
  • But it wouldn't be OS independent so would be less portable, and I was claiming that the generated HTML source code would be more readable - but actually I find lines containing PHP_EOL easier to scan because I can tell where its headed.
    – Cups
    Apr 21, 2010 at 16:48
  • I tried this but I needed to use \t to make the HTML line up anyway.
    – Noumenon
    Jul 29, 2015 at 2:57
  • this is the only way i found to make html source page readable (including javascript generated by php code, in my case array definitions), i.e: debugging javascript code.
    – j.c
    Sep 16, 2016 at 15:08
17

If you want to write plain text, you must ensure the content type is set to Content-Type: text/plain. Example:

header('Content-Type: text/plain');

If you are dealing with HTML, you have two options. One is to inset a new line using <br> (Or <br /> for XHTML). The other is to put the plain text in a <pre> element (In this case "pre" stands for preformatted).

1
  • 3
    Please explain the downvote? It would be good to know what was wrong with my answer so that I can correct it.
    – Yacoby
    Apr 20, 2010 at 12:14
7

PHP generates HTML. You may want:

echo "foo";
echo "<br />\n";
echo "bar";
5
  • 2
    there is no need for the \n there
    – Hendrik
    Apr 20, 2010 at 11:43
  • 4
    PHP does not generate HTML. Apr 20, 2010 at 11:44
  • 1
    Looks like @Hendrik you have never had to debug generated HTML source code Apr 20, 2010 at 12:13
  • @Felix care to share your brilliant knowledge of proper terminology? Apr 20, 2010 at 12:45
  • 1
    @Col. Shrapnel: Sure. PHP just outputs text (characters), nothing more nothing less. It depends what you do with the output. E.g. the OPs code would create the desired result when run from the commandline. Saying that PHP generates HTML is just wrong. Apr 20, 2010 at 13:32
4

if your text has newlines, use nl2br php function:

<?php
$string = "foo"."\n"."bar";
echo nl2br($string);
?>

This should look good in browser

3

Assuming you're viewing the output in a web browser you have at least two options:

  1. Surround your text block with <pre> statements

  2. Change your \n to an HTML <br> tag (<br/> will also do)

0
2

Since it wasn't mentioned, you can also use the CSS white-space property

body{
    white-space:pre-wrap;
}

Which tells the browser to preserve whitespace so that

<body>
    <?php
        echo "hello\nthere";
    ?>
</body>

Would display

hello
there
2

We can use \n as a new line in php.

Code Snippet :

 <?php
  echo"Fo\n";
  echo"Pro";
?>

Output:

Fo
Pro

1

It will be written on a new line if you examine the source code of the page. If you want it to appear on a new line when it is rendered in the browser, you'll have use a <br /> tag instead.

1

This works perfectly for me...

echo nl2br("\n");

Reference: http://www.w3schools.com/php/func_string_nl2br.asp

Hope it helps :)

1

This answer was so obvious and it took me forever to figure out:

echo "foo
bar";

I know that looks like it's wrapping. It's not. What I did is I literally hit return halfway through the string, between foo and bar. It creates a new line in the HTML source and makes your PHP look horrible. This was in Linux/Apache.

0
echo "foo<br />bar";
0

We can apply \n in php by using two type

  1. Using CSS

    body {
        white-space: pre-wrap;
    }
    

    Which tells the browser to preserve whitespace so that

    <body>
        <?php
            echo "Fo\n Pro";
        ?>
    </body>
    

    Result:

    Fo
    Pro

  2. Using nl2br

    nl2br: Inserts HTML line breaks before all newlines in a string

    <?php
        echo nl2br("Fo.\nPro.");
    ?>
    

    Result

    Fo.
    Pro.

0

the html element break line depend of it's white-space style property. in the most of the elements the default white-space is auto, which mean break line when the text come to the width of the element. if you want the text break by \n you have to give to the parent element the style: white space: pre-line, which will read the \n and break the line, or white-space: pre which will also read \t etc. note: to write \n as break-line and not as a string , you have to use a double quoted string ("\n") if you not wanna use a white space, you always welcome to use the HTML Element for break line, which is <br/>

-1
$a = 'John' ; <br/>
$b = 'Doe' ; <br/>
$c = $a.$b"&lt;br/>";
1
  • 1
    While this code may answer the question, providing additional context regarding how and/or why it solves the problem would improve the answer's long-term value.
    – Nic3500
    Aug 9, 2018 at 10:33

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