Course Content
Introduction
PHP is an object-oriented scripting programming language that allows web developers to create dynamic and interactive web pages. PHP stands for Hypertext Preprocessor (PHP).
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Control Statement
A control statement is a statement that determines whether other statements will be executed.
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PHP for Beginners
About Lesson

The operator is a symbol that is used to execute operations on operands.

PHP divides the operators into the following groups:

  • Arithmetic Operators
  • Assignment Operators
  • Bitwise Operators
  • Comparison Operators
  • Incrementing/Decrementing Operators
  • Logical Operators
  • String Operators
  • Type Operators
  • Error Control Operators

 

Arithmetic Operators

Arithmetic operators are used to perform common arithmetic operations such as addition, subtraction, etc. with numeric values.

Operator Name Example Explanation
+ Addition $a + $b Sum of $a and $b
Subtraction $a – $b A difference of $a and $b
* Multiplication $a * $b Product of $a and $b
/ Division $a / $b Quotient of $a and $b
% Modulus $a % $b The remainder of $a divided by $b
** Exponentiation $a ** $b Result of raising $a to the $b’th power

 

Assignment Operators

Operator Name Example Explanation
= Assign $a = $b The value of the right operand is assigned to the left operand.
+= Add then Assign $a += $b Addition same as $a = $a + $b
-= Subtract then Assign $a -= $b Subtraction same as $a = $a – $b
*= Multiply then Assign $a *= $b Multiplication same as $a = $a * $b
/= Divide then Assign (quotient) $a /= $b Find quotient same as $a = $a / $b
%= Divide then Assign (remainder) $a %= $b Find remainder same as $a = $a % $b

 

Bitwise Operators

The bitwise operators are used to perform bit-level operations on variables.

Operator Name Example Explanation
& And $a & $b Bits that are 1 in both $a and $b are set to 1, otherwise 0.
| Or (Inclusive or) $a | $b Bits that are 1 in either $a or $b are set to 1
^ Xor (Exclusive or) $a ^ $b Bits that are 1 in either $a or $b are set to 0.
~ Not ~$a Bits that are 1 set to 0 and bits that are 0 are set to 1

 

Comparison Operators

Comparison operators are used to comparing two values, such as number or string.

Operator Name Example Explanation
== Equal $a == $b Return TRUE if $a is equal to $b
=== Identical $a === $b Return TRUE if $a is equal to $b, and they are of the same data type
!== Not identical $a !== $b Return TRUE if $a is not equal to $b, and they are not of the same data type
!= Not equal $a != $b Return TRUE if $a is not equal to $b
<> Not equal $a <> $b Return TRUE if $a is not equal to $b
< Less than $a < $b Return TRUE if $a is less than $b
> Greater than $a > $b Return TRUE if $a is greater than $b
<= Less than or equal to $a <= $b Return TRUE if $a is less than or equal $b
>= Greater than or equal to $a >= $b Return TRUE if $a is greater than or equal $b
<=> Spaceship $a <=>$b Return -1 if $a is less than $b
Return 0 if $a is equal $b
Return 1 if $a is greater than $b

 

Incrementing/Decrementing Operators

The increment and decrement operators are used to increase and decrease the value of a variable.

Operator Name Example Explanation
++ Increment ++$a Increment the value of $a by one, then return $a
$a++ Return $a, then increment the value of $a by one
decrement –$a Decrement the value of $a by one, then return $a
$a– Return $a, then decrement the value of $a by one

 

Logical Operators

The logical operators are used to perform bit-level operations on variables.

Operator Name Example Explanation
and And $a and $b Return TRUE if both $a and $b are true
or Or $a or $b Return TRUE if either $a or $b is true
xor Xor $a xor $b Return TRUE if either $ or $b is true but not both
! Not ! $a Return TRUE if $a is not true
&& And $a && $b Return TRUE if either $a and $b are true
|| Or $a || $b Return TRUE if either $a or $b is true

 

String Operators

The string operators are used to operate on strings.

Operator Name Example Explanation
. Concatenation $a . $b Concatenate both $a and $b
.= Concatenation and Assignment $a .= $b First concatenate $a and $b, then assign the concatenated string to $a, e.g. $a = $a . $b

 

Error Control Operators

PHP has one error control operator, i.e., at (@) symbol. Whenever it is used with an expression, any error message will be ignored that might be generated by that expression.

Operator Name Example Explanation
@ at @file (‘non_existent_file’) Intentional file error