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Lære Strings | Variables and Data Types
Introduction to PHP

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Strings

Strings are used to represent textual information and can be defined within single ' ' or double " " quotes.

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<?php $name = "John"; $message = 'Hello, World!'; ?>

Strings can contain any characters, including letters, digits, and special symbols.

String Concatenation


Concatenation in PHP is used to join strings together into one string. The concatenation operator . (dot) is used for this purpose:

php

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<?php $firstName = "John"; $lastName = "Doe"; $fullName = $firstName . " " . $lastName; // `$fullName` will be `"John Doe"` echo $fullName; ?>

The code above defines two variables, $firstName and $lastName, with values "John" and "Doe" respectively. It concatenates them into $fullName using the dot operator and then outputs the full name "John Doe" using echo.

Using Single and Double Quotes


You can use both '(single) and "(double quotes) to define strings. They have some differences in how they handle variables and special characters.

Double quotes allow variables to be directly used within the string and support escaping special characters:

php

main

copy
123456
<?php $name = "John"; $message = "Hello, $name!"; echo $message; ?>

Single quotes treat everything inside them as literal text, ignoring variables and special characters:

php

main

copy
123456
<?php $name = "John"; $message = 'Hello, $name!'; echo $message; ?>
Oppgave

Swipe to start coding

  1. Assign any name to the variable $name.

  2. Concatenate the strings using the . operator so that running the code outputs the greeting "Hello, SomeName!".

Løsning

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Seksjon 2. Kapittel 3

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book
Strings

Strings are used to represent textual information and can be defined within single ' ' or double " " quotes.

php

main

copy
1234
<?php $name = "John"; $message = 'Hello, World!'; ?>

Strings can contain any characters, including letters, digits, and special symbols.

String Concatenation


Concatenation in PHP is used to join strings together into one string. The concatenation operator . (dot) is used for this purpose:

php

main

copy
1234567
<?php $firstName = "John"; $lastName = "Doe"; $fullName = $firstName . " " . $lastName; // `$fullName` will be `"John Doe"` echo $fullName; ?>

The code above defines two variables, $firstName and $lastName, with values "John" and "Doe" respectively. It concatenates them into $fullName using the dot operator and then outputs the full name "John Doe" using echo.

Using Single and Double Quotes


You can use both '(single) and "(double quotes) to define strings. They have some differences in how they handle variables and special characters.

Double quotes allow variables to be directly used within the string and support escaping special characters:

php

main

copy
123456
<?php $name = "John"; $message = "Hello, $name!"; echo $message; ?>

Single quotes treat everything inside them as literal text, ignoring variables and special characters:

php

main

copy
123456
<?php $name = "John"; $message = 'Hello, $name!'; echo $message; ?>
Oppgave

Swipe to start coding

  1. Assign any name to the variable $name.

  2. Concatenate the strings using the . operator so that running the code outputs the greeting "Hello, SomeName!".

Løsning

Switch to desktopBytt til skrivebordet for virkelighetspraksisFortsett der du er med et av alternativene nedenfor
Alt var klart?

Hvordan kan vi forbedre det?

Takk for tilbakemeldingene dine!

Seksjon 2. Kapittel 3
Switch to desktopBytt til skrivebordet for virkelighetspraksisFortsett der du er med et av alternativene nedenfor
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