When writing the syntax for an associative array in PHP we do the following
$a = array('foo' => 'bar');
I am curious of the relationship of the =>
syntax, or possibly operator. Does this relate to some kind of reference used in the hash table in ZE, or some kind of subsequent right shift or reference used in C
? I guess I am just wondering the true underlying purpose of this syntax, how it relates to ZE and/or php extensions used to handle arrays, how it possibly relates to th开发者_StackOverflow中文版e written function in C
before compiled, or If I just have no idea what I am talking about :)
The =>
symbol a.k.a. T_DOUBLE_ARROW
is just a parser token like class
, ||
or ::
.
See: The list of php parser tokens
It's nothing special apart from that fact that "it looks like an arrow"
and it is used for "array stuff"
.
Of course the exact usage is more complicated than that but "array stuff"
is the short inaccurate description that should do it.
It's used to represent key
=> (points to
) value
The answer to that is no simpler than "It looks like an arrow". It's not exactly the assignment operator per say because that would mean a variable-like assignment (like for the array itself). This is an array-internals specific assignment operator.
Webdevelopers are cool like that :P
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