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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T18:03:45+00:00 2026-05-13T18:03:45+00:00

An inexperienced PHP question: I’ve got a PHP script file that I need to

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An inexperienced PHP question:

I’ve got a PHP script file that I need to include on different pages lots of times in lots of places.

I have the option of either breaking the included file down into several smaller files and include these on a as-needed basis… OR … I could just keep it all together in a single PHP file.

I’m wondering if there’s any performance impact of using a larger vs. smaller file for include() in this context? For example, is there any performance difference between a 200KB file and a 20KB file?

Thank you.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T18:03:45+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:03 pm

    There will be a difference, between a 200KB and a 20KB file… But you will probably not notice it : a 200KB file is not that big — and you generally use a lot of files that are not “small”, when you’re building a big application.

    There are two things that take time, when you’re loading a .php file :

    • The PHP source code is “compiled” to “opcodes” — that’s quite equivalent to JAVA bytecode
      • This is done each time a PHP file is included, by default
      • But, using some opcode cache like APC, those opcodes can be kept in memory, and this compilation stuff not done each time anymore — which is great : it’ll mean less CPU used, as the compilation will not be done anymore (it’ll be done only once in a while).
    • The opcodes are executed
      • Depending on what you script contains, this can take some time, or not :
      • If the file only contain functions or classes definitions, this will not take much time : nothing will get executed.
      • If the file contains instructions, it’ll take more time ^^

    As a sidnote : in a general situation, you’ll gain a lot more time/cpu/resources optimizing your SQL queries, or adding some caching mecanism, than thinking about that kind of stuff.

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