Instruction Seperation
Separation of Code
Like
many programming languages, PHP requires coding instructions to be terminated
with a semicolon at the end of each statement. The closing tag of a block of
PHP code automatically implies a semicolon; you do not need to have a semicolon
terminating the last line of a PHP block. The closing tag for the block will
include the immediately trailing newline if one is present.
<?php
echo 'Coders today';
?>
<?php echo 'Coderstoday - Learn Programming in an easy way' ?>
<?php echo 'Coderztoday';
Note:
The closing tag of a PHP block at the end of a file is optional, and in some cases omitting it is helpful when using include or require, so unwanted whitespace will not occur at the end of files, and you will still be able to add headers to the response later. It is also handy if you use output buffering, and would not like to see added unwanted whitespace at the end of the parts generated by the included files.
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