259
<?php

$a=1;

?>
<?=$a;?>

What does <?= mean exactly?

3
  • 1
    Side note: This is used extensively in ASP.NET MVC views.
    – Omar
    Commented Jan 7, 2010 at 14:26
  • 2
    stackoverflow.com/questions/1963901/…
    – Mike B
    Commented Jan 7, 2010 at 17:10
  • 22
    Note that the ; is redundant; as the answers suggest this short-tag expands to an echo with a semicolon added to the end, as per the php documents. Commented Oct 5, 2015 at 1:25

8 Answers 8

347

It's a shorthand for <?php echo $a; ?>.

It's enabled by default since 5.4.0 regardless of php.ini settings.

2
  • 3
    Is it available in php 7?
    – zachdyer
    Commented Feb 27, 2018 at 20:33
  • 12
    Note that the final semi-colon is not required. But if, for whatever reason, you need to go back to classic tags, a simple project-wide search/replace <?= for <?php echo would'nt be enough. Anyway as of today I hope you guys doesn't have any production servers running PHP < 5.6 as this versions are not maintained anymore (PHP Supported Versions).
    – TwystO
    Commented Dec 4, 2018 at 11:25
64

It's a shorthand for this:

<?php echo $a; ?>

They're called short tags; see example #1 in the documentation.

0
25

Since it wouldn't add any value to repeat that it means echo, I thought you'd like to see what means in PHP exactly:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [0] => 368 // T_OPEN_TAG_WITH_ECHO
            [1] => <?=
            [2] => 1
        )
    [1] => Array
        (
            [0] => 309 // T_VARIABLE
            [1] => $a
            [2] => 1
        )
    [2] => ; // UNKNOWN (because it is optional (ignored))
    [3] => Array
        (
            [0] => 369 // T_CLOSE_TAG
            [1] => ?>
            [2] => 1
        )
)

You can use this code to test it yourself:

$tokens = token_get_all('<?=$a;?>');
print_r($tokens);
foreach($tokens as $token){
    echo token_name((int) $token[0]), PHP_EOL;
}

From the List of Parser Tokens, here is what T_OPEN_TAG_WITH_ECHO links to.

1
  • The token failed to tell me more details.
    – user198729
    Commented Jan 7, 2010 at 14:14
14

<?= $a ?> is the same as <? echo $a; ?>, just shorthand for convenience.

8
<?=$a; ?>

is a shortcut for:

<?php echo $a; ?>
8

As of PHP 5.4.0, <?= ?> are always available even without the short_open_tag set in php.ini.

Furthermore, as of PHP 7.0, The ASP tags: <%, %> and the script tag <script language="php"> are removed from PHP.

5

It's a shortcut for <?php echo $a; ?> if short_open_tags are enabled. Ref: http://php.net/manual/en/ini.core.php

4

I hope it doesn't get deprecated. While writing <? blah code ?> is fairly unnecessary and confusable with XHTML, <?= isn't, for obvious reasons. Unfortunately I don't use it, because short_open_tag seems to be disabled more and more.

Update: I do use <?= again now, because it is enabled by default with PHP 5.4.0. See http://php.net/manual/en/language.basic-syntax.phptags.php

0

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