tags:

views:

154

answers:

2

This is the code in index.php,with only <?php,but no ?>,this is my first time to see code like this,any reason?

<?php
// $Id: index.php,v 1.94 2007/12/26 08:46:48 dries Exp $

/**
 * @file
 * The PHP page that serves all page requests on a Drupal installation.
 *
 * The routines here dispatch control to the appropriate handler, which then
 * prints the appropriate page.
 *
 * All Drupal code is released under the GNU General Public License.
 * See COPYRIGHT.txt and LICENSE.txt.
 */

require_once './includes/bootstrap.inc';
drupal_bootstrap(DRUPAL_BOOTSTRAP_FULL);

$return = menu_execute_active_handler();

// Menu status constants are integers; page content is a string.
if (is_int($return)) {
  switch ($return) {
    case MENU_NOT_FOUND:
      drupal_not_found();
      break;
    case MENU_ACCESS_DENIED:
      drupal_access_denied();
      break;
    case MENU_SITE_OFFLINE:
      drupal_site_offline();
      break;
  }
}
elseif (isset($return)) {
  // Print any value (including an empty string) except NULL or undefined:
  print theme('page', $return);
}

drupal_page_footer();
+8  A: 

Omitting the closing tag prevents the accidental injection of trailing white space into the response.

Is a common coding practice in some Frameworks, like Zend.

CMS
It could be worth stating for those who don't know, the reason you don't want accidental white space is that it is a very quick way to end up with the `headers already sent` problem.
Blair McMillan
+2  A: 

Omitting PHP closing tags is part of the Drupal Coding Standards.

Ever since Drupal 4.7, the ?> at the end of code files is purposely omitted. This includes for module and include files. The reasons for this can be summarized as:

  • Removing it eliminates the possibility for unwanted whitespace at the end of files which can cause "header already sent" errors, XHTML/XML validation issues, and other problems.
  • The closing delimiter at the end of a file is optional.
  • PHP.net itself removes the closing delimiter from the end of its files (example: prepend.inc), so this can be seen as a "best practice."
alexanderpas