PHP

Constants

PHP / Constants

Constants

Constants

Constants are identifiers used to store fixed values that cannot be changed or removed during program execution.

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How to Define Constants

PHP provides two ways to create constants:

  • Using the define() function
  • Using the const keyword

define() Function

The define() function is used to create a constant with a fixed value that cannot be changed during program execution.

A constant created using define() keeps the same value throughout the script.

Example

// Creating constants using define() function
define("SITE_NAME", "MyWebsite");
define("VERSION", "1.0");

// Displaying constants
echo "Site Name: " . SITE_NAME;
echo "\n";

echo "Version: " . VERSION;
?>

const Keyword

The const keyword is used to create a constant with a fixed value that remains unchanged throughout the script.

The const keyword defines a constant at compile-time, meaning its value is set before the script runs.

Key Features

  • Must be declared at the top-level scope
  • Cannot be used inside functions, loops, if/else, or try/catch blocks (in general usage)
  • Can be used to define class constants
  • Constants are case-sensitive

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Example

// Constant using const keyword
const SITE_NAME = "MyWebsite";
const PI = 3.14;

echo SITE_NAME;
echo "\n";
echo PI;
?>

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PHP
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