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Module 1 Introduction to PHP 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP.

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Presentation on theme: "Module 1 Introduction to PHP 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP."— Presentation transcript:

1 Module 1 Introduction to PHP 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

2 PHP References General: Download, documentation Documentation: manual
Documentation: manual PHP.net tutorial W3schools tutorial 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

3 PHP functions Documented PHP functions
You can create your own functions too 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

4 Objectives What is PHP? How does a PHP script work with a Web Browser and a Web Server? What software and components you need to get started with PHP? To create and run a simple PHP script 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

5 What Is PHP? PHP, PHP Hypertext Preprocessor
Server-side scripting languages for creating dynamic web pages 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

6 PHP advantages Advantages of Using PHP to enhance Web pages:
Easy to use Simpler than Perl Open source Multiple platform. 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

7 How PHP Pages are Accessed and Interpreted
Client: Web browser Web server 1.Form submitted with a submit button  Action sends a request to the php file in server 3. Receive the request, find the file, and read it 4. Execute the PHP commands 5. Send the results back 6. ---- results returned as HTML file 7. Web browser renders the HTML file, displaying the results 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

8 Getting Started with PHP
To develop and publish PHP scripts you need: A client machine with a basic text editor and Internet connection Prepare a text file with .php extension FTP or Telnet software Upload the file.php to the server A Web server with PHP built into it Process the file.php 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

9 WHH Note This means that a browser e.g. IE or Firefox on the client computer will not recognize or render a file with extension .php How do you check your PHP script before submission to server? 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

10 Getting Started with PHP
Set up development computer as a server Laptop contains a server and a browser environment Laptop is also set up as a Web server - WAMPserver Windows Apache, MySQL, PHP Client machine: PC, XP, editors, browsers Internet connection not needed Use copy and paste to transfer the scripts For class demos: localhost or or cs346 server 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

11 Exploring the Basic PHP Development Process
The basic steps you can use to develop and publish PHP pages are: 1. Create a PHP script file and save it to a local disk Test on localhost until satisfied 2. Use FTP to copy the file to the server 3. Access your file via URL on server using a browser IE, Netscape, Opera, etc. 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

12 Check PHP installation
Create a simple PHP script, called phpinfo.php The PHP script starts with a <?php tag and ends with ?> Between these tags is a single PHP statement: phpinfo(); Copy the file to a directory of local server For WAMP: wamp/www Access the file with a browser 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

13 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

14 Checking the server set up
Upload the phpinfo.php to cs346 server E.g. to huen/m00 Click on the link Check the various environments: Apache MySQL PHP functions variables 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

15 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

16 Creating a PHP Script File
Create PHP script welcome.php Starts with a <?php tag and ends with ?> Between these tags is a single PHP print statement Copy the file to C:\wamp\www Access the file with Demo on localhost Demo on cs346 server 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

17 Similarly for other PHP scripts
Upload welcome.php to huen/m00 Click on <?PHP /* welcome.php */ print ("<h1 style=\"color: blue;\">Welcome to PHP, CS346 class!</h1>"); /* Note the combination of html tags and css */ ?> 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

18 Note the effect of CSS 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

19 Alternative PHP Delimiters
You can alternatively start your PHP scripts with the <script> tag as follows: <script language="PHP"> print ("A simple initial script"); </script> If short_open_tag enabled in its configuration file (php.ini), you can use <? and ?>. If asp_tags is enabled in the PHP configuration file, you can use <% and %> as delimiters. 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

20 Proper Syntax If you have a syntax error then you have written one or more PHP statements that are grammatically incorrect in the PHP language. The print statement syntax: 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

21 If syntax is wrong <?php print ( "Welcome to PHP, CS346 class!);
?> 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

22 A Little About PHP's Syntax
Some PHP Syntax Issues: Be careful to use quotation marks, parentheses, and brackets in pairs. Most PHP commands end with a semicolon (;). Be careful of case. PHP ignores blank spaces. 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

23 Embedding PHP Statements Within HTML Documents
One way to use PHP is to embed PHP scripts within HTML tags in an HTML document. Save the file first with extension html Validate the html file Change the extension to php Access the script by URL on server 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

24 <html xmlns = "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head>
<title>HTML With PHP Embedded </title> </head> <body> <p style = "font-family:sans-serif; font-size:36; color:yellow; background-color:green"> Welcome To My Page! <?PHP print ("<br /> Using PHP is not hard!"); ?> <br /> and you can learn it quickly!</p> </body> </html> 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

25 When embedded1.php is accessed
11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

26 Using Backslash (\) to Generate HTML Tags with print()
Sometimes you want to output an HTML tag that also requires double quotation marks. Use the backslash (“\”) character to signal that the double quotation marks themselves should be output: print ("<font color=\"blue\">"); The above statement would output: <font color="blue"> 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

27 Using Comments with PHP Scripts
Comments enable you to include descriptive text along with the PHP script. Comment lines are ignored when the script runs; they do not slow down the run-time. Comments have two common uses. Describe the overall script purpose. Describe particularly tricky script lines. 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

28 Using Comments with PHP Scripts
Comment Syntax - Use // standalone <?php // This is a comment ?> Can be placed on Same line as a statement: print ("A simple initial script"); //Output a line 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

29 Example Script with Comments
1. <html> <head> 2. <title> Generating HTML From PHP</title> </head> 3. <body> <h1> Generating HTML From PHP</h1> 4. <?php 5. // 6. // Example script to output HTML tags 7. // 8. print ("Using PHP has <i>some advantages:</i>"); 9. print ("<ul><li>Speed</li><li>Ease of use</li> <li>Functionality</li></ul>"); //Output bullet list 10. print ("</body></html>"); 11. ?> 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

30 Alternative Comment Syntax
PHP allows a couple of additional ways to create comments. <?php phpinfo(); # This is a built-in function ?> Multiple line comments. /* A script that gets information about the PHP version being used. */ <? phpinfo(); ?> 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

31 Summary HTML pages are static and cannot interact with users
PHP is a free, open source technology that enables documents to generate dynamic content PHP script has the extension of .php PHP script may be standalone or Can be embedded in an HTML document 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

32 Summary Resources needed for development: Web server with built-in PHP
a client machine with a basic text editor, browser, and internet connections FTP or Telnet software to send the script to the server 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP

33 Summary PHP script process: Comments can be proceeded with
write the PHP script file copy the script file to the Web server access the file with a Web browser Comments can be proceeded with two forward slashes (//) or # or enclosed in /* and */ 11/30/2018 CS346 PHP


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