11
I have this question that is leaving me with a flea behind my ear. I don’t understand at all.
What does the sign of :
two points. Someone can explain me?
Example:
if ( have_posts() ) : while ( have_posts() ) : the_post();
11
I have this question that is leaving me with a flea behind my ear. I don’t understand at all.
What does the sign of :
two points. Someone can explain me?
Example:
if ( have_posts() ) : while ( have_posts() ) : the_post();
19
This is an alternative syntax for a block that is bounded by keys { }
. In this case the opening turns the two points :
and the closure is a end
followed by the name instruction that started can be a endif
, endforeach
etc. This syntax applies the instructions if, while, for, foreach, and switch
.
$arr = range(1,5);
foreach ($arr as $item){
echo $item .'<br>';
}
The same code with the other syntax.
$arr = range(1,5);
foreach ($arr as $item):
echo $item .'<br>';
endforeach;
Thank you very much. I only knew the keys. Now it’s making sense.
I was in doubt about the two points within the "IF", it is also a condition, within a condition?
@Narsejo has an example to show?
10
Complementing the @rray response. You will also find the two-point sign :
as part of the ternary operator ?:
used for conditions.
Take an example:
$user = "gato";
echo ($user === "gato") ? "meow" : "nao eh um gato :(";
Exit:
Meow
This one I knew. It was exactly what was confusing me a lot. Now everything is making sense to me.
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