PHP
语言参考 | Language Reference

Constants

Constants

Table of Contents

  • Syntax

  • Magic constants

A constant is an identifier (name) for a simple value. As the name suggests, that value cannot change during the execution of the script (except for magic constants, which aren't actually constants). A constant is case-sensitive by default. By convention, constant identifiers are always uppercase.

The name of a constant follows the same rules as any label in PHP. A valid constant name starts with a letter or underscore, followed by any number of letters, numbers, or underscores. As a regular expression, it would be expressed thusly: a-zA-Z_\x7f-\xff*

Tip

See also the Userland Naming Guide.

Example #1 Valid and invalid constant names

<?php // Valid constant names define("FOO",     "something" define("FOO2",    "something else" define("FOO_BAR", "something more" // Invalid constant names define("2FOO",    "something" // This is valid, but should be avoided: // PHP may one day provide a magical constant // that will break your script define("__FOO__", "something"  ?>

Note: For our purposes here, a letter is a-z, A-Z, and the ASCII characters from 127 through 255 (0x7f-0xff).

Like superglobals, the scope of a constant is global. You can access constants anywhere in your script without regard to scope. For more information on scope, read the manual section on variable scope.

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