Marc Delisle schrieb:
Sebastian Mendel a écrit :
Marc Delisle schrieb:
Hi,
don't you feel that something is not consistent between
http://pear.php.net/manual/en/standards.including.php and http://pear.php.net/manual/en/standards.control.php
no
"require_once" and "if" are both statements, so why does the PEAR standard say that you need parenthesis for "if" and not for "require_once"?
cause 'if' requires parenthesis for correct syntax
and if i would agree you than we had to rite
require_once ('file.php');
and not
require_once('file.php');
same for return
return ($var);
!!! BUT:
Note: Note that since return() is a language construct and not a function, the parentheses surrounding its arguments are only required if the argument contains an expression. It is common to leave them out while returning a variable, and you actually should as PHP has less work to do in this case.
Note: You should never use parentheses around your return variable when returning by reference, as this will not work. You can only return variables by reference, not the result of a statement. If you use return ($a); then you're not returning a variable, but the result of the expression ($a) (which is, of course, the value of $a).
i don't know if "It is common to leave them out while returning a variable, and you actually should as PHP has less work to do in this case." also applies to 'require'
so i think you should never write parenthesis where it is not required.
Too bad the PHP manual does not follow PEAR coding standards: http://ca3.php.net/manual/en/function.require-once.php
require_once("a.php"); // this will include a.php
this is not en example for require_once, it is an example for case sensitivity in filenames ... ;-)
see:
http://php.net/require http://php.net/include