It is used to tell the sever to use the PHP parser. To begin php you must use <?php, and to end it, it is ?>.
I use my left pinky to press and hold "Shift" and press the question mark key with my right pinky.
If you have ordered questions into bullet points then each question (or bullet point) should end with a question mark.
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At the end of a statement (a declarative or imperative sentence), you can use a period. After exclamatory sentences, use an exclamation mark, and after interrogative sentences, use a question mark.
Of all the things that an exclamation mark can convey, uncertainty would not be one of them. You may use a question mark to convey uncertainty within or outside of a parenthetical.
The PHP question mark "<?" is a signal to the web server that everything up until "?>" will be PHP code and should be treated accordingly.
Firstly, this is wrong question. The right one would be WHEN should you use PHP, not JSP? or, WHEN should you use PHP and WHEN JSP?
You can't use PHP in an HTML document, but you can use HTML in PHP script.
If your question starts with the words, 'who, why , what, when, where and how, your sentence will require a question mark
This is a very broad question, many web design companies will make sites in PHP. Facebook for instance is made in PHP, although the have modified it a bit for their massive traffic!
I am asking the question?>>PHP ,Perl scripts can be edited with help of editors like Editplus,Notepad++ OR you can also use Zend IDE.
Use a question mark to create an interrogative sentence -- one that asks a question.
You use a question mark because it's a question. You are asking them how they are doing.
You use a question mark (?) as the punctuation after the sentence or question you are asking.
A question mark is a punctuation mark, it replaces the use of a full stop at the end of a sentence that is asking a question.
This is a very confusing question, if you are meaning Amazon EC3 then yes as Google's cloud service does not support PHP at the moment.
No you should only use a question mark.