I'm yet to be convinced it isn't a bug. I suspect it is a bug that has been
around so long that they can't afford to fix it or it may break many
applications that for various peculiar reasons rely on it to behave as it does
for their code to work.
For those who have tried to defend its behaviour, this is my logic.
1. The == operator means, by definition, "don't worry about variable 'type', just
compare the values"
(This is probably the single thing I love about PHP more than anything else)
2. If the numeric variable $x is given ANY other numeric value other than zero,
the logic behaves correctly as you read it
So it is irrational for program logic to vary between a zero value and, for
aguments sake, a numeric value of 42.
Regarding specifically TG's explanation below, I believe he is wrong. If you
compare a numeric type and a string type using ==, PHP should convert the
number to a string and compare the two from there.
Anyway, not expecting any answers to this, just a point of note and a strange
quirk to keep at the back of your head when consciously comparing numeric /
string variables.
Ross
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It's because PHP is trying to convert different var types into a common var
type and then compare them when you use ==. === means compare value AND type
so that's why it fails.
Your string, 'Some kind of string' is getting converted down to the lowest
common denominator, an int. Since there are no numbers in the string to grab
onto, it gets converted to nothing, an int value of zero.
If you had $x = "0" or if $y had contained numbers at all, it wouldn't have
passed.
But this is why when you use $x.'' it works properly because now you have "0<empty
string>", it's been converted to a string value "0". Good catch on that though, shows
good methodical debugging :)
So in the future, either use === or be extra aware of your variable types and
make sure you're comparing properly.
Good luck!
-TG
= = = Original message = = =
$x = 0; // Numeric zero
$y = 'Some kind of string';
if ($x == $y) echo 'they equal using ==';
if ($x === $y) echo 'they equal using ===';
The above will echo 'they equal using =='.
The values don't look very equal to me.
Can anyone explain the logic behind this?
I'm heading home now but look forward to your explanations tomorrow.
PS
Incidently, to 'fix' it so it behaves as it should, you can code:
if ($x.'' == $y.'') echo 'this will not print and all is good.';
Regards .. Ross
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