This is a simplified version of what I want to accomplish:
In my script I want a variable that changes true and false everytime the script is executed.
<?php
static $bool = true;
// Print differente messages depending on $bool
if( $bool == true )
echo "It's true!";
else
echo "It's false!";
// Change $bools value
if( $bool == true )
$bool = false
else
$bool = true;
?>
But obviously what I'm doing is wrong. The variable $bool
is constantly true
and I haven't fully grasped the concept of static variables I presume. What am I doing wrong?
PHP is not able to keep variable values between requests. This means that each time your script is called, the $bool
-variable will be set to true. If you want to keep the value between requests you have to use sessions
or, if you want the variable shared between sessions, some caching mechanism like APC
or Memcache
.
Also, static
is used in PHP to declare a variable shared on the class level. It is thus used in classes, and accessed like self::$variableName;
or Foo::$variableName
You can read more about static properties here. From the docs:
Declaring class properties or methods as static makes them accessible without needing an instantiation of the class. A property declared as static can not be accessed with an instantiated class object (though a static method can).
Also, note that the word static
has been overloaded since PHP 5.3, and can also be used to denote Late Static Binding, by use of static::