Currently UNDEFINED would be just string 'UNDEFINED'.
Doesn't atoi() for non-numeric string make it 0 ??
(or null..:) So that would work without changing anything..
--Jani
Dmitry Stogov kirjoitti:
I think it will work.
#ifdef UNDEFINED > 5 (false)
#ifdef UNDEFINED <= 5 (true)
(but anyway I think it is possible to find out an unclear condition)
Dmitry.
Marcus Boerger wrote:
Hello Dmitry,
shouldn't this be like in C/C++ where a non existing value is
treated like
an empty string which behaves like false in boolean evaluations?
marcus
Friday, February 15, 2008, 11:25:42 AM, you wrote:
#if defined(PHP_MAJOR_VERSION) && PHP_MAJOR_VERSION >= 6
extension="unicode.so"
#endif
Here PHP_MAJOR_VERSION is a PHP constant that is not defined in
php-5.3 but might be defined in the future version.
Dmitry.
Jani Taskinen wrote:
On Fri, 2008-02-15 at 13:02 +0300, Dmitry Stogov wrote:
Jani Taskinen wrote:
c) We can use just "value" insted of ${value} in conditions.
Yup. ${foobar} is actually not any "variable" per se, but just a
reference to existing ini entry in the file. And I don't think that
needs to change.
Oh, I see. Then we can use just "$string" (or "$str.str") for ini
entries and "string" for PHP constants. We can also implement
defined() macro-function, to check if constant defined.
Why? Don't make php.ini parsing any more complex than it already
is(n't).
Any string which can pass as constant will have that constant's (or
environment variable) value. Why do you need any "variable" in there
anyway? And why do you need defined() ??? (examples please? :)
--Jani
Best regards,
Marcus
--
PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php