What's the difference between those two:
use Exception;
use \Exception;
Or those:
use Foo\Bar;
use \Foo\Bar;
The manual says:
Note that for namespaced names (fully qualified namespace names containing namespace separator, such as Foo\Bar as opposed to global names that do not, such as FooBar), the leading backslash is unnecessary and not allowed, as import names must be fully qualified, and are not processed relative to the current namespace.
But I don't really understand this, as all of the above variants work, i.e. it definitely is not "not allowed".
A look into zend_do_use
showed, that is_global
(set, when there is a leading backslash) is only used for a warning in the following case:
namespace {
use Exception;
}
Which tells me: "The use statement with non-compound name 'Exception' has no effect". (Though doing the same with use \Exception
would have just as little effect, but does not throw a warning.)
So: Am I missing something? Is there actually some difference?
In fact there is no difference in using leading backslash in importing namespaces at the moment and also information in PHP manual has changed:
So now there is true information that using leading backslash is not recommended but there is no info that it's not allowed at it was in past.
So at the moment:
those 2 lines work the same but you should rather use the first one.
le't say we have
then the first use actually imports class MyNamespace\Exception and the second one just the main class \Exception
so you can have something like
and then I can
The leading backslash means the global namespace. If you are in a namespace's scope, you have to use that to reach the global namespace. For example:
With leading backslash you got the absolute path, and without it you got the relative path.
Usually the leading backslash defines, that the identifier is absolute. If its missing, the interpreter assumes, that it is a relative identifier.
This is an absolute identifier:
This is a relative identifier, because of the no leading slash. It's relative to the current namespace:
This is also a relative identifier. In this case, its resolved against the
use
statement, because the last part (alias) is the same, as the first of the class:However, because in
namespace
anduse
statements only absolute identifiers (fully qualified names) are allowed, it's ok to omit it here. Innamespace
, it's even not allowed to set the leading backslash.For further information on how PHP resolves the different namespace declarations, see the namespace rules manual.
The manual specifies the backslash as unnecessary, which naturally means that if you still use it that the meaning is equivalent. However, as you have pointed out, the manual says that it is supposedly not allowed, which is false.
However, there is something else troubling with the manual. They advertise this:
If it is true that import names are not processed relative to the current namespace, then
use \ArrayObject
anduse ArrayObject
must have the same meaning. What else coulduse ArrayObject
refer to other than the global one? In practice, the engine will import the global one.Also, with bugs such as this: http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=49143
I believe there is confusion over what the standard is supposed to be.
To answer your question: there is no difference. However, if I was the engine developer who was also a believer of the no-leading-slash standard, then I wouldn't need to consider a case where someone wrote
use \Exception;
. I believe this was likely the case.