1

I have this code:

$numPage = 10;
for($i = 0; $i < $numPage; $i++) {
 echo "Current Page: ".$i+1."/$numPage<br>";

}

why I am getting this error:

Parse error: syntax error, unexpected '"', expecting ',' or ';' on line 4

I concatenate correctly outside of the string, what am I doing wrong? Thanks

0

7 Answers 7

3

Simply add parantheses: echo "Current Page: ".($i+1)."/$numPage<br>";

0
3

Special case. The tokenizer expected a float constant here:

 +1."

This is not seen as a one and the concatenation dot, but as the leading 1. of a 1.003 for example.
Note that you don't need any whitespace or extra parens if you wrote:

 echo "Current Page: ".$i+1.0."/$numPage<br>";

The error message is a little misleading.


Note, that this just avoids the parsing error. This might still lead to an invalid result.

2
  • 1
    You still need the parenthesis ;) But still +1 for noticing that this is actually a lexing issue ;)
    – NikiC
    Oct 19, 2011 at 18:03
  • @NikiC You don't need parenthesis (to get it to parse -- "working" is another story). A space before the . would "fix" the syntax error as well. +1 for the explanation of why it is a syntax error: moral of the story: write readable code -- it matters to the computer as well ;-)
    – user166390
    Oct 19, 2011 at 18:45
3

+ and . have the same operator precedence and are left associative in PHP, so PHP interprets it as:

echo (("Current Page: ".$i)+1)."/$numPage<br>";

What you want is:

echo "Current Page: ".($i+1)."/$numPage<br>";

Or:

echo "Current Page: ", $i+1, "/$numPage<br>";
1
  • +1 For explaining the precedence. However, this does not explain the syntax error -- the fixed code just happens to bypass the issue. This contains no syntax error: echo "Current Page: " . $i+1 . "/$numPage<br>"; even if it will fail to "work" as expected ;-)
    – user166390
    Oct 19, 2011 at 18:47
2

Check "1." it may be treating it as a float. Use ($i+1) instead.

0

Spacing out the concatenation seems to work.

<?php
$numPage = 10;
for($i = 0; $i < $numPage; $i++) {
 echo "Current Page: " . $i+1 . "/$numPage<br>";

}
?>
0

Write it like that:

$numPage = 10;

for($i = 0; $i < $numPage; $i++)
{
    echo "Current Page : " . ($i + 1) . " " . $numPage . "<br />";
}
0

Try this:

echo "Current Page: ".($i+1)."/$numPage<br>";

Order of operations doesn't apply just to math, but programming as well. Your code was saying:

  1. append $i to the string
  2. then add 1, converting the string to an integer (0) and resulting in integer (1)
  3. then you were attempting to concatenate a string to an integer (1)

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