Why would one omit the close tag?
Sending headers earlier than the normal course may have far reaching consequences. Below are just a few of them that happened to come to my mind at the moment:
While current PHP releases may have output buffering on, the actual production servers you will be deploying your code on are far more important than any development or testing machines. And they do not always tend to follow latest PHP trends immediately.
You may have headaches over inexplicable functionality loss. Say, you are implementing some kind payment gateway, and redirect user to a specific URL after successful confirmation by the payment processor. If some kind of PHP error, even a warning, or an excess line ending happens, the payment may remain unprocessed and the user may still seem unbilled. This is also one of the reasons why needless redirection is evil and if redirection is to be used, it must be used with caution.
You may get "Page loading canceled" type of errors in Internet Explorer, even in the most recent versions. This is because an AJAX response/json include contains something that it shouldn't contain, because of the excess line endings in some PHP files, just as I've encountered a few days ago.
If you have some file downloads in your app, they can break too, because of this. And you may not notice it, even after years, since the specific breaking habit of a download depends on the server, the browser, the type and content of the file (and possibly some other factors I don't want to bore you with).
Finally, many PHP frameworks including Symfony, Zend and Laravel (there is no mention of this in the coding guidelines but it follows the suit) and the PSR-2 standard (item 2.2) require omission of the closing tag. PHP manual itself (1,2), Wordpress, Drupal and many other PHP software I guess, advise to do so. If you simply make a habit of following the standard (and setup PHP-CS-Fixer for your code) you can forget the issue. Otherwise you will always need to keep the issue in your mind.
Bonus: a few gotchas (actually currently one) related to these 2 characters:
- Even some well-known libraries may contain excess line endings after
?>
. An example is Smarty, even the most recent versions of both 2.* and 3.* branch have this. So, as always, watch for third party code. Bonus in bonus: A regex for deleting needless PHP endings: replace(\s*\?>\s*)$
with empty text in all files that contain PHP code.
The reason you should leave off the php closing tag (?>
) is so that the programmer doesn't accidentally send extra newline chars.
The reason you shouldn't leave off the php closing tag is because it causes an imbalance in the php tags and any programmer with half a mind can remember to not add extra white-space.
So for your question:
Is there another good reason to skip the ending php tag?
No, there isn't another good reason to skip the ending php tags.
I will finish with some arguments for not bothering with the closing tag:
People are always able to make mistakes, no matter how smart they are. Adhering to a practice that reduces the number of possible mistakes is (IMHO) a good idea.
PHP is not XML. PHP doesn't need to adhere to XMLs strict standards to be well written and functional. If a missing closing tag annoys you, you're allowed to use a closing tag, it's not a set-in-stone rule one way or the other.
It's a newbie coding style recommendation, well-intentioned, and advised by the manual.
Eschewing
?>
however solves just a trickle of the common headers already sent causes (raw output, BOM, notices, etc.) and their follow-up problems.PHP actually contains some magic to eat up single linebreaks after the
?>
closing token. Albeit that has historic issues, and leaves newcomers still susceptible to flaky editors and unawarely shuffling in other whitespace after?>
.Stylistically some developers prefer to view
<?php
and?>
as SGML tags / XML processing instructions, implying the balance consistency of a trailing close token. (Which btw, is useful for dependency-conjoining class includes to supplant inefficient file-by-file autoloading.)Somewhat uncommonly the opening
<?php
is characterized as PHPs shebang (and fully feasible per binfmt_misc), thereby validating the redundancy of a corresponding close tag.There's an obvious advise discrepancy between classic PHP syntax guides mandating
?>\n
and the more recent ones (PSR-2) agreeing on omission.
(For the record: Zend Framework postulating one over the other does not imply its inherent superiority. It's a misconception that experts were drawn to / target audience of unwieldy APIs).SCMs and modern IDEs provide builtin solutions mostly alleviating close tag caretaking.
Discouraging any use of the ?>
close tag merely delays explaining basic PHP processing behaviour and language semantics to eschew infrequent issues. It is practical still for collaborative software development due to proficiency variations in participants.
Close tag variations
The regular ?> close tag is also known as
T_CLOSE_TAG
, or thus "close token".-
It comprises a few more incarnations, because of PHPs magic newline eating:
?>\n (Unix linefeed)
?>\r (Carriage return, classic MACs)
?>\r\n (CR/LF, on DOS/Win)
PHP doesn't support the Unicode combo linebreak NEL (U+0085) however.
Early PHP versions had IIRC compile-ins limiting platform-agnosticism somewhat (FI even just used
>
as close marker), which is the likely historic origin of the close-tag-avoidance. Often overlooked, but until PHP7 removes them, the regular
<?php
opening token can be validly paired with the rarely used</script>
as odd closing token.-
The "hard close tag" isn't even one -- just made that term up for analogy. Conceptionally and usage-wise
__halt_compiler
should however be recognized as close token.__HALT_COMPILER(); ?>
Which basically has the tokenizer discard any code or plain HTML sections thereafter. In particular PHAR stubs make use of that, or its redundant combination with
?>
as depicted. Likewise does a void
return;
infrequently substitute in include scripts, rendering any?>
with trailing whitespace noneffective.-
Then there are all kinds of soft / faux close tag variations; lesser known and seldomly used, but usually per commented-out tokens:
Simple spacing
// ? >
to evade detection by PHPs tokenizer.Or fancy Unicode substitutes
// ﹖﹥
(U+FE56 SMALL QUESTION MARK, U+FE65 SMALL ANGLE BRACKET) which a regexp can grasp.
Both mean nothing to PHP, but can have practical uses for PHP-unaware or semi-aware external toolkits. Again
cat
-joined scripts come to mind, with resulting// ? > <?php
concatenations that inline-retain the former file sectioning.
So there are context-dependent but practical alternatives to an imperative close tag omission.
Manual babysitting of ?>
close tags is not very contemporary either way. There always have been automation tools for that (even if just sed/awk or regex-oneliners). In particular:
phptags tag tidier
https://fossil.include-once.org/phptags/
Which could generally be used to --unclose
php tags for third-party code, or rather just fix any (and all) actual whitespace/BOM issues:
phptags --warn --whitespace *.php
It also handles --long
tag conversion etc. for runtime/configuration compatibility.
It isn't a tag…
But if you have it, you risk having white space after it.
If you then use it as an include at the top of a document, you could end up inserting white space (i.e. content) before you attempt to send HTTP headers … which isn't allowed.
According to the docs, it's preferable to omit the closing tag if it's at the end of the file for the following reason:
If a file is pure PHP code, it is preferable to omit the PHP closing tag at the end of the file. This prevents accidental whitespace or new lines being added after the PHP closing tag, which may cause unwanted effects because PHP will start output buffering when there is no intention from the programmer to send any output at that point in the script.
PHP Manual > Language Reference > Basic syntax > PHP tags