define() vs. const
As of PHP 5.3 there are two ways to define constants: Either using the const
keyword or using the define()
function:
const FOO = 'BAR';
define('FOO', 'BAR');
The fundamental difference between those two ways is that const
defines constants at compile time, whereas define
defines them at run time. This causes most of const
's disadvantages. Some disadvantages of const
are:
const
cannot be used to conditionally define constants. To define a global constant, it has to be used in the outermost scope:if (...) { const FOO = 'BAR'; // Invalid } // but if (...) { define('FOO', 'BAR'); // Valid }
Why would you want to do that anyway? One common application is to check whether the constant is already defined:
if (!defined('FOO')) { define('FOO', 'BAR'); }
const
accepts a static scalar (number, string or other constant liketrue
,false
,null
,__FILE__
), whereasdefine()
takes any expression. Since PHP 5.6 constant expressions are allowed inconst
as well:const BIT_5 = 1 << 5; // Valid since PHP 5.6 and invalid previously define('BIT_5', 1 << 5); // Always valid
const
takes a plain constant name, whereasdefine()
accepts any expression as name. This allows to do things like this:for ($i = 0; $i < 32; ++$i) { define('BIT_' . $i, 1 << $i); }
const
s are always case sensitive, whereasdefine()
allows you to define case insensitive constants by passingtrue
as the third argument (Note: defining case-insensitive constants is deprecated as of PHP 7.3.0.):define('FOO', 'BAR', true); echo FOO; // BAR echo foo; // BAR
So, that was the bad side of things. Now let's look at the reason why I personally always use const
unless one of the above situations occurs:
const
simply reads nicer. It's a language construct instead of a function and also is consistent with how you define constants in classes.const
, being a language construct, can be statically analysed by automated tooling.const
defines a constant in the current namespace, whiledefine()
has to be passed the full namespace name:namespace A\B\C; // To define the constant A\B\C\FOO: const FOO = 'BAR'; define('A\B\C\FOO', 'BAR');
Since PHP 5.6
const
constants can also be arrays, whiledefine()
does not support arrays yet. However, arrays will be supported for both cases in PHP 7.const FOO = [1, 2, 3]; // Valid in PHP 5.6 define('FOO', [1, 2, 3]); // Invalid in PHP 5.6 and valid in PHP 7.0
Finally, note that const
can also be used within a class or interface to define a class constant or interface constant. define
cannot be used for this purpose:
class Foo {
const BAR = 2; // Valid
}
// But
class Baz {
define('QUX', 2); // Invalid
}
Summary
Unless you need any type of conditional or expressional definition, use const
s instead of define()
s - simply for the sake of readability!
Until PHP 5.3, const
could not be used in the global scope. You could only use this from within a class. This should be used when you want to set some kind of constant option or setting that pertains to that class. Or maybe you want to create some kind of enum.
define
can be used for the same purpose, but it can only be used in the global scope. It should only be used for global settings that affect the entire application.
An example of good const
usage is to get rid of magic numbers. Take a look at PDO's constants. When you need to specify a fetch type, you would type PDO::FETCH_ASSOC
, for example. If consts were not used, you'd end up typing something like 35
(or whatever FETCH_ASSOC
is defined as). This makes no sense to the reader.
An example of good define
usage is maybe specifying your application's root path or a library's version number.
I know this is already answered, but none of the current answers make any mention of namespacing and how it affects constants and defines.
As of PHP 5.3, consts and defines are similar in most respects. There are still, however, some important differences:
- Consts cannot be defined from an expression.
const FOO = 4 * 3;
doesn't work, butdefine('CONST', 4 * 3);
does. - The name passed to
define
must include the namespace to be defined within that namespace.
The code below should illustrate the differences.
namespace foo
{
const BAR = 1;
define('BAZ', 2);
define(__NAMESPACE__ . '\\BAZ', 3);
}
namespace {
var_dump(get_defined_constants(true));
}
The content of the user sub-array will be ['foo\\BAR' => 1, 'BAZ' => 2, 'foo\\BAZ' => 3]
.
=== UPDATE ===
The upcoming PHP 5.6 will allow a bit more flexibility with const
. You will now be able to define consts in terms of expressions, provided that those expressions are made up of other consts or of literals. This means the following should be valid as of 5.6:
const FOOBAR = 'foo ' . 'bar';
const FORTY_TWO = 6 * 9; // For future editors: THIS IS DELIBERATE! Read the answer comments below for more details
const ULTIMATE_ANSWER = 'The ultimate answer to life, the universe and everything is ' . FORTY_TWO;
You still won't be able to define consts in terms of variables or function returns though, so
const RND = mt_rand();
const CONSTVAR = $var;
will still be out.