I know that you can create global constants in terms of each other using string concatenation:
define(\'FOO\', \'foo\');
define(\'BAR\', FOO.\'bar\');
echo
Always fall back to the trusty manual for stuff like this.
Regarding constants:
The value must be a constant expression, not (for example) a variable, a property, a result of a mathematical operation, or a function call.
So... "no" would be the answer :D
This may not be directly what you're looking for, but I came across this thread, so here is a solution that I used for an issue I was having (based off of @user187291's answer):
define('app_path', __DIR__ . '/../../');
const APPLICATION_PATH = app_path;
.
.
.
require_once(APPLICATION_PATH . "some_directory/some_file.php");
.
.
.
Seems to work great!
The only way is to define() an expression and then use that constant in the class
define('foobar', 'foo' . 'bar');
class Foo
{
const blah = foobar;
}
echo Foo::blah;
Another option is to go to bugs.php.net and kindly ask them to fix this.
For class constants, you can't assign anything other than a constant expression. Quoting the PHP manual:
"The value must be a constant expression, not (for example) a variable, a property, a result of a mathematical operation, or a function call. "
Imho, this question deserves an answer for PHP 5.6+, thanks to @jammin comment
Since PHP 5.6 you are allowed to define a static scalar expressions for a constant:
class Foo {
const BAR = "baz";
const HAZ = self::BAR . " boo\n";
}
Although it is not part of the question, one should be aware of the limits of the implementation. The following won't work, although it is static content (but might be manipulated at runtime):
class Foo {
public static $bar = "baz";
const HAZ = self::$bar . " boo\n";
}
// PHP Parse error: syntax error, unexpected '$bar' (T_VARIABLE), expecting identifier (T_STRING) or class (T_CLASS)
class Foo {
public static function bar () { return "baz";}
const HAZ = self::bar() . " boo\n";
}
// PHP Parse error: syntax error, unexpected '(', expecting ',' or ';'
For further information take a look at: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/const_scalar_exprs and http://php.net/manual/en/language.oop5.constants.php