PHP supports C-style pre- and post-increment and decrement
    operators.
   
Note: 
     The increment/decrement operators do not affect boolean values.
     Decrementing NULL values has no effect too, but incrementing them
     results in 1.
    
Table 15-6. Increment/decrement Operators
| Example | Name | Effect | 
|---|
| ++$a | Pre-increment | Increments $a by one, then returns $a. | 
| $a++ | Post-increment | Returns $a, then increments $a by one. | 
| --$a | Pre-decrement | Decrements $a by one, then returns $a. | 
| $a-- | Post-decrement | Returns $a, then decrements $a by one. | 
    Here's a simple example script:
    
   
    PHP follows Perl's convention when dealing with arithmetic operations
    on character variables and not C's.  For example, in Perl 'Z'+1 turns
    into 'AA', while in C 'Z'+1 turns into '[' ( ord('Z') == 90, ord('[') == 91 ).
    Note that character variables can be incremented but not decremented and
    even so only plain ASCII characters (a-z and A-Z) are supported.
    
Example 15-4. Arithmetic Operations on Character Variables 
<?php $i = 'W'; for ($n=0; $n<6; $n++) {     echo ++$i . "\n"; } ?>
 |  
 The above example will output:  | 
   
    Incrementing or decrementing booleans has no effect.