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PHP - Using Functions
Sunday, 10 June 2007
Using Functions

Real world applications are usually much larger than the examples above. In has been proven that the best way to develop and maintain a large program is to construct it from smaller pieces (functions) each of which is more manageable than the original program.

A function may be defined using syntax such as the following:

<?php
function addition($val1, $val2)
{
    $sum = $val1 + $val2;
    return $sum;
}
?>


Using Default Parameters

When calling a function you usually provide the same number of argument as in the declaration. Like in the function above you usually call it like this :

$result = addition(5, 10);

But you can actually call a function without providing all the arguments by using default parameters.


<?php

function repeat($text, $num = 10)
{
   echo "<ol>\r\n";
   for($i = 0; $i < $num; $i++)
   {
      echo "<li>$text </li>\r\n";
   }
   echo "</ol>";
}

// calling repeat with two arguments
repeat("I'm the best", 15);

// calling repeat with just one argument
repeat("You're the man");
?>

Function repeat() have two arguments $text and $num. The $num argument has a default value of 10. The first call to repeat() will print the text 15 times because the value of $num will be 15. But in the second call to repeat() the second parameter is omitted so repeat() will use the default $num value of 10 and so the text is printed ten times.

Returning Values

Applications are usually a sequence of functions. The result from one function is then passed to another function for processing and so on. Returning a value from a function is done by using the return statement.


<?php
$myarray = array('php tutorial',
                 'mysql tutorial',
                 'apache tutorial',
                 'java tutorial',
                 'xml tutorial');

$rows  = buildRows($myarray);
$table = buildTable($rows);

echo $table;

function buildRows($array)
{
   $rows = '<tr><td>' .
           implode('</td></tr><tr><td>', $array) .
           '</td></tr>';

   return $rows;
}

function buildTable($rows)
{
   $table = "<table cellpadding='1' cellspacing='1'             bgcolor='#FFCC00' border='1'>$rows</table>";

   return $table;
}
?>

You can return any type from a function. An integer, double, array, object, resource, etc.

Notice that in buildRows() I use the built in function implode(). It joins all elements of $array with the string '</td></tr><tr><td>' between each element. I also use the '.' (dot) operator to concat the strings.

You can also write buildRows() function like this.

<?php
...

function buildRows($array)
{
   $rows = '<tr><td>';
   $n    = count($array);
   for($i = 0; $i < $n - 1; $i++)
   {
      $rows .= $array[$i] . '</td></tr><tr><td>';
   }

   $rows .= $array[$n - 1] . '</td></tr>';

   return $rows;
}

...
?>

Of course it is more convenient if you just use implode().

 
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