Looping statements in PHP are used
to execute the same block of code a specified number of times.
Very often when you write code,
you want the same block of code to run a number of times. You can use looping
statements in your code to perform this.
In PHP we have the following
looping statements:
The while statement will execute a
block of code if and as long as a condition is true.
while (condition) code to be executed; |
The following example demonstrates
a loop that will continue to run as long as the variable i is less than, or
equal to 5. i will increase by 1 each time the loop runs:
<html> <body> <?php $i=1; while($i<=5) { echo "The number is " . $i . "<br />"; $i++; } ?> </body> </html> |
The do...while statement will
execute a block of code at least once - it then will repeat the loop as
long as a condition is true.
do { code to be executed; } while (condition); |
The following example will
increment the value of i at least once, and it will continue incrementing the
variable i as long as it has a value of less than 5:
<html> <body> <?php $i=0; do { $i++; echo "The number is " . $i . "<br />"; } while ($i<5); ?> </body> </html> |
The for statement is used when you
know how many times you want to execute a statement or a list of statements.
for (initialization; condition; increment) { code to be executed; } |
Note: The for statement has three parameters.
The first parameter initializes variables, the second parameter holds the
condition, and the third parameter contains the increments required to
implement the loop. If more than one variable is included in the initialization
or the increment parameter, they should be separated by commas. The condition
must evaluate to true or false.
The following example prints the
text "Hello World!" five times:
<html> <body> <?php for ($i=1; $i<=5; $i++) { echo "Hello World!<br />"; } ?> </body> </html> |
The foreach statement is used to
loop through arrays.
For every loop, the value of the
current array element is assigned to $value (and the array pointer is moved by
one) - so on the next loop, you'll be looking at the next element.
foreach (array as value) { code to be executed; } |
The following example demonstrates
a loop that will print the values of the given array:
<html> <body> <?php $arr=array("one", "two", "three"); foreach ($arr as $value) { echo "Value: " . $value . "<br />"; } ?> </body> </html> |