It's mainly so you can make start and end statements clearer when creating HTML in loops:
<table>
<? while ($record = mysql_fetch_assoc($rs)): ?>
<? if (!$record['deleted']): ?>
<tr>
<? foreach ($display_fields as $field): ?>
<td><?= $record[$field] ?></td>
<? endforeach; ?>
<td>
<select name="action" onChange="submit">
<? foreach ($actions as $action): ?>
<option value="<?= $action ?>"><?= $action ?>
<? endforeach; ?>
</td>
</tr>
<? else: ?>
<tr><td colspan="<?= array_count($display_fields) ?>"><i>record <?= $record['id'] ?> has been deleted</i></td></tr>
<? endif; ?>
<? endwhile; ?>
</table>
versus
<table>
<? while ($record = mysql_fetch_assoc($rs)) { ?>
<? if (!$record['deleted']) { ?>
<tr>
<? foreach ($display_fields as $field) { ?>
<td><?= $record[$field] ?></td>
<? } ?>
<td>
<select name="action" onChange="submit">
<? foreach ($actions as $action) { ?>
<option value="<?= $action ?>"><?= action ?>
<? } ?>
</td>
</tr>
<? } else { ?>
<tr><td colspan="<?= array_count($display_fields) ?>"><i>record <?= $record['id'] ?> has been deleted</i></td></tr>
<? } ?>
<? } ?>
</table>
Hopefully my example is sufficient to demonstrate that once you have several layers of nested loops, and the indenting is thrown off by all the PHP open/close tags and the contained HTML (and maybe you have to indent the HTML a certain way to get your page the way you want), the alternate syntax (endforeach
) form can make things easier for your brain to parse. With the normal style, the closing }
can be left on their own and make it hard to tell what they're actually closing.
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