The way you asked the question makes it confusing. It is possible to make PHP run on all types of files on your server with a bit of Apache tweaking. My solution will make your JS files be processed by the PHP interpreter.
What you need to do is create a .htaccess file if you are using Apache. I am going to assume you are. Then you add this line into it:
AddType application/x-httpd-php .php .js
The above code will force the PHP interpreter to run on all the formats listed in the command. You can also add .htm or even .css if you need PHP to do something with those files on the server side.
Refer to this question here for a previous solution to similar question > Using .htaccess to make all .html pages to run as .php files?
Or you can just store a whole bunch of variables from the PHP end on the page as Javascript variables like this example from one of my projects:
<script type="text/javascript">
var trackFilterFlag = null;
<?php
echo "trackFilterFlag = \"". $displayedPageType ."\";\r\n";
?>
var trackFilterCategory = null;
<?php
if(strcmp($displayedPageType, "mood") === 0 || strcmp($displayedPageType, "genre") === 0) {
echo "trackFilterCategory = \"". $filterCategory ."\";\r\n";
}
?>
var sortingTracksBy = null;
<?php
if( isset($chosenSortFlag) && strlen($chosenSortFlag) > 3 && !($defaultSort) ) {
echo "sortingTracksBy = \"". $chosenSortFlag ."\";\r\n";
}
?>
</script>
Of course I was still a novice when I wrote that code, it's possible to make it much neater and just make PHP echo the whole thing, but you understand what I mean :)