ID:               37047
 Updated by:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reported By:      karoly at negyesi dot net
 Status:           Verified
 Bug Type:         Documentation problem
 Operating System: Irrevelant
 PHP Version:      5.1.2
 New Comment:

It's the same as
<?php
exit;
class Test { }
?>
The class will be still declared, even though there is an exit
statement before the declaration. It doesn't mean that it's "executed",
because there is a big difference between "execution" and "compilation".


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2006-04-11 22:44:27] karoly at negyesi dot net

Hint. If you doc this please doc everything as well that executes at
compile time. It will be a very interesting handbook page...

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2006-04-11 22:38:31] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sorry. I misread.

You're right (-:

S


------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2006-04-11 22:37:29] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

see: http://php.net/return

"the return() statement immediately ends execution of the current
function"

(It's already documented.)

S


------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2006-04-11 22:28:04] karoly at negyesi dot net

Then this is a docs issue. Because I do not expect anything to be
executed after a return...

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2006-04-11 22:21:31] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Static variables are resolved in compile time.
Expected behaviour.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

The remainder of the comments for this report are too long. To view
the rest of the comments, please view the bug report online at
    http://bugs.php.net/37047

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