Defining namespaces
  
  (PHP 5 >= 5.3.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)
  
   Although any valid PHP code can be contained within a namespace, only the following
   types of code are affected by namespaces: classes (including abstract classes, traits and enums), interfaces,
   functions and constants.
  
  
   Namespaces are declared using the namespace
   keyword. A file containing a namespace must declare the namespace
   at the top of the file before any other code - with one exception: the
   declare keyword.
   
    Example #1 Declaring a single namespace
    
     <?php
namespace MyProject;
const CONNECT_OK = 1;
class Connection { /* ... */ }
function connect() { /* ... */ }
?>
     
    
   Nota: 
    
     Fully qualified names (i.e. names starting with a backslash) are not allowed in namespace
     declarations, because such constructs are interpreted as relative namespace expressions.
    
   
   The only code construct allowed before a namespace declaration is the
   
declare statement, for defining encoding of a source file. In addition,
   no non-PHP code may precede a namespace declaration, including extra whitespace:
   
    Example #2 Declaring a single namespace
    
     <html>
<?php
namespace MyProject; // fatal error - namespace must be the first statement in the script
?>
     
    
  
  
   In addition, unlike any other PHP construct, the same namespace may be defined
   in multiple files, allowing splitting up of a namespace's contents across the filesystem.