--- title: Operators --- ## Operators PHP contains all the normal operators one would expect to find in a programming language. A single “=” is used as the assignment operator and a double “==” or triple “===” is used for comparison. The usual “<” and “>” can also be used for comparison and “+=” can be used to add a value and assign it at the same time. Most notable is the use of the “.” to concatenate strings and “.=” to append one string to the end of another. New to PHP 7.0.X is the Spaceship operator (<=>). The spaceship operator returns -1, 0 or 1 when $a is less than, equal to, or greater than $b. ```php 1; // 0 echo 1 <=> 2; // -1 echo 2 <=> 1; // 1 ``` ### Ternary Operators If you need a very short, simple, easy maintaining that work just like if else statement then php give you ternary operator. A very poweful but easy operator. It looks like this - (?:). Simple, right? Lets get to examle. Suppose you need to send a massage that if the user is logged in then say 'Hello user_name' if not then 'Hello guest'. if we use if-else statement: ``` if($user == !NULL { $message = 'Hello '. $user; } else { $message = 'Hello guest'; } ``` Using ternary operator: ``` $message = 'Hello '.($user == !NULL ? $user : 'Guest'); ``` Both of them do exactly same thing. But the later one is easy for maintainance. #### More Resources - [PHP Shorthand If/Else Using Ternary Operators (?:)](https://davidwalsh.name/php-shorthand-if-else-ternary-operators)