ID: 26582 Updated by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reported By: iwd32900 at yahoo dot com -Status: Feedback +Status: No Feedback Bug Type: Documentation problem Operating System: Darwin/Mac OS X PHP Version: 4.3.4 New Comment:
No feedback was provided. The bug is being suspended because we assume that you are no longer experiencing the problem. If this is not the case and you are able to provide the information that was requested earlier, please do so and change the status of the bug back to "Open". Thank you. Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2003-12-10 09:39:06] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Does heredoc work for you with \r? ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2003-12-10 09:12:36] iwd32900 at yahoo dot com Description: ------------ The current manual says this, under the "Heredoc" section in "Strings" in "Types": ----- It's also important to realize that the first character before the closing identifier must be a newline as defined by your operating system. This is \r on Macintosh for example. If this rule is broken and the closing identifier is not "clean" then it's not considered to be a closing identifier and PHP will continue looking for one. If in this case a proper closing identifier is not found then a parse error will result with the line number being at the end of the script. ----- I have two issues with this. 1. This doesn't appear to be true. I'm using the entropy.ch distribution of 4.3.4, and it accepts \n as a linefeed before the end marker on my Mac. 2. One of the great things about PHP is that it's cross- platform portable. The interpretter otherwise seems to be linefeed-agnostic; it should be here, too. That way, I can write my scripts on any platform and distribute them to any other, and no one has to worry about something as irritating as linefeeds. Just check for any of \n, \r, or \r\n before a heredoc terminator. Should be really easy, and it will do a lot for making PHP more platform independent. Reproduce code: --------------- $heredoc = <<<HEREDOC Does this cause a parse error? HEREDOC; echo $heredoc; // No, it doesn't Expected result: ---------------- Given what the manual says, this should break since the linefeeds are Unix but it was run on a Mac. The documented behavior isn't the DESIRABLE behavior, however. PHP should accept all linefeed types on all platforms to promote code portability. Actual result: -------------- The example works just fine on my Mac, actually. It may be that the cross-platform behavior is already implementd, and just hasn't been documented yet. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=26582&edit=1