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What is the difference between these three?

return , echo and print keyword in PHP

function theBand($abc,$bac) { return $abc; echo $abc; } 

Both does the same, it does show or return me the value holding in the variable abc. Now return exists the function and echo continues. Apart from this is there anything specific on return keyword.

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  • Both don't do the same work though, you're wrong. Commented Apr 25, 2010 at 22:30
  • echo & print prints to screen literally. Return just gives you the value to THEN do what you want to it, ie. echo. Return is better in many cases. Commented Aug 8, 2012 at 14:03

3 Answers 3

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return is a language construct used to exit a function and give a value to the caller of the function.

echo and print are both language constructs that output strings. The main difference is that echo can take multiple arguments separated by commas, but print accepts only a single argument.

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3 Comments

what does this statement of yours mean? give a value to the caller of the function and does echo and print does not exit a function from performing the next statement
@theband: I'm not sure exactly what you need me to clarify. return is pretty much the same in PHP as it is in any other language - it returns a value. Have you used return before in any language? Is there a specific word in my answer that you don't understand? Do you know about functions and their purpose? Regarding your second question, you are right that print and echo do not cause the function to exit. Execution continues on the next line.
I have updated my question, please do check and thanks for the answer.
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return is used when a function has to return a value.

please see HERE

echo and print are very similar however echo is faster as it does not return a value.

  1. Speed. There is a difference between the two, but speed-wise it should be irrelevant which one you use. echo is marginally faster since it doesn't set a return value if you really want to get down to the nitty gritty.

  2. Expression. print() behaves like a function in that you can do:

    $ret = print "Hello World"; 

    And $ret will be 1. That means that print can be used as part of a more complex expression where echo cannot. An example from the PHP Manual:

    $b ? print "true" : print "false"; 

    print is also part of the precedence table which it needs to be if it is to be used within a complex expression. It is just about at the bottom of the precedence list though. Only ",", AND, OR and XOR are lower.

  3. Parameter(s). The grammar is: echo expression [, expression[, expression] ... ]. But echo ( expression, expression ) is not valid. This would be valid: echo ("howdy"),("partner"); the same as: echo "howdy","partner"; (Putting the brackets in that simple example serves no purpose since there is no operator precedence issue with a single term like that.)

So, echo without parentheses can take multiple parameters, which get concatenated:

echo "and a ", 1, 2, 3; // comma-separated without parentheses echo ("and a 123"); // just one parameter with parentheses 

print() can only take one parameter:

print ("and a 123"); print "and a 123"; 

1 Comment

I thought some proper formatting would look nice on your answer. ;)
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print returns 1, while echo returns nothing. Echo also can take multiple arguments, as Mark points out.

return (in the context of a function) exits the function (Returning a value, if provided). In the global context, return will stop executing whatever file it's in. So you can bail out of an include file, or halt execution of the main script this way.

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