Expressions and Operators

An expression is a bit of PHP that can be evaluated to produce a value. The simplest expressions are literal values and variables. A literal value evaluates to itself, while a variable evaluates to the value stored in the variable. More complex expressions can be formed using simple expressions and operators.

An operator takes some values (the operands) and does something (for instance, adds them together). Operators are written as punctuation symbols—for instance, the + and - familiar to us from math. Some operators modify their operands, while most do not.

Table 2-3 summarizes the operators in PHP, many of which were borrowed from C and Perl. The column labeled “P” gives the operator’s precedence; the operators are listed in precedence order, from highest to lowest. The column labeled “A” gives the operator’s associativity, which can be L (left-to-right), R (right-to-left), or N (non-associative).

Table 2-3. PHP operators

P

A

Operator

Operation

19

N

new

Create new object

18

R

[

Array subscript

17

R

!

Logical NOT

R

~

Bitwise NOT

R

++

Increment

R

--

Decrement

R

(int), (double), (string), (array), (object)

Cast

R

@

Inhibit errors

16

L

*

Multiplication

L

/

Division

L

%

Modulus

15

L

+

Addition

L

-

Subtraction

L

.

String concatenation

14

L

<<

Bitwise shift left

L

>>

Bitwise shift right

13

N

<, <=

Less than, less than or equal

N

>, >=

Greater than, greater than or equal

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