There is a big difference between isset() and empty() and it was discussed a lot in the past.
You'll see both sides to the coin after reading the archives. It's really a problem make a call on this one.


Andi

At 01:13 PM 10/20/2004 +0200, Ron Korving wrote:
Okay, I don't wanna make remarks that may have already been made earlier,
but I think it should be "all should be empty", because it works exactly the
same for isset(), and apparently, a decision was made to give isset() that
feature.

Ron


"Derick Rethans" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schreef in bericht news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > On Wed, 20 Oct 2004, Ron Korving wrote: > > > I think it would be a good idea to apply the idea of infinite parameters > > that's been used with isset(), so one can test multiple variables: > > > > if (empty($var1, $var2, $var3)) echo "data missing"; > > We discussed this before and we didn't want to agree if it should behave > like "each one should be empty" or "all should be empty". So we will not > add it. > > Derick > > -- > Derick Rethans > http://derickrethans.nl | http://ez.no | http://xdebug.org

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