Underlying philosophy behind php type comparisons

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不思量自难忘° 2021-02-10 00:38

So there\'s this page on the php site which shows the result of comparing different values:

http://php.net/manual/en/types.comparisons.php

This is a helpful refe

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  • 2021-02-10 00:57

    The base pattern is the same to the one used in C: anything non-zero is true for the sake of boolean comparisons.

    In this sense, an empty string or array is also false.

    The hairy scalar to look out for is '0', which is (very inconveniently) treated as empty too because it gets converted to an integer. array(0) is just as thorny on the array front.

    When using strict comparisons (=== and !==), things are a lot more sane. In practice, it's often a good idea to cast input coming from superglobals and the database as appropriate, and to use these operators from that point forward.

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  • 2021-02-10 01:00

    For casting directly to a boolean this is how it works.

    • All string with a length > 0 are true
    • All non 0 numbers are true
    • All non-empty arrays are true
    • All objects are true

    Then these rules for comparing variables of the same type:

    1. Objects are equivalent if their properties are equal
    2. Arrays are equivalent if their keys and elements are equal
    3. Strings are equivalent if they would produce the same output
    4. Numbers are equivalent if they are mathematically equivalent
    5. Booleans are equivalent if they have the same value.

    For variable of different types the type that is higher on the above list is cast to the one that is lower then the comparison is made.

    === and !== operators don't cast prior to comparing but you should note objects are only === if they are the same instance.

    The really odd one is arrays, they are === if they have the same keys and values defined in the same order.

    $a = array("a"=>1, "b"=>2);
    $b = array("b"=>2, "a"=>1);
    
    $a == $b; // true
    $a === $b; // false
    

    and empty() is equivalent to !(bool)$var

    EXCEPTIONS

    • Casting an array to a string will trigger a notice and unhelpfully cast as the text Array
    • Casting an object without a __toString method to a string will get you a fatal error.
    • Objects will not implicitly cast to an array, so any time you compare an object to an array it will yield a false (UPDATE confirmed that this is true even if object implemtents the ArrayAccess interface)
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  • 2021-02-10 01:03

    There is imo a very straightforward guideline and a bug in the specification, which might be confusing.

    Strict comparison checks equality in datatype and value. Loose comparison checks equality in value only.

    For an object (not part of the comparison table) is php quite straightforward: if the object is the same instance as the other one, then is it strictly equal, otherwise might it be loosely equal.

    Therefor is a 0 and a "0" loosely equal to each other and to false (and to any string). The latter can be understood as all strings are not numeric, hence false and the number that is equal to false is 0, hence all strings are equal to 0.

    The comparison between null and array() is more complicated. If you check an array created with array() and compare that loosely and strictly, then will it return true. If you however check it with is_null, then will it return false. I think the latter is more logical, because an array() created with array() is not equal to '', where null is. I would think that this functional inconsistency between the function is_null() and the checks == null or === null a bug, because it should not happen that using two different valid methods to check for a value return different results. Null is also not an array according to the function is_array(), which is true. An empty array is an array according to the function is_array(), which should be true too. Hence should it never be true that null is equal to array().

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  • 2021-02-10 01:04

    There is no particular logic, but you can figure out some patterns.

    • "empty" values (null, false, 0, empty string and string '0') evaluate to false
    • comparison of numeric values is done implicitly converting them to integers until some version (there was a bug when two actually different long numeric strings counted as equal, now it's fixed)
    • when working with arrays, there is no difference between integer and numeric indexes, except when you call array_key_exists with explicit strict parameter
    • comparing number with string implicitly converts right argument to the type of the left one
    • return ($something); implicitly converts $something to string if it is not scalar
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  • 2021-02-10 01:09

    For strict === comparision, the logic is easy: each value entity is equal only to itself, so TRUE === TRUE, "1" === "1", but "1" !== 1 etc.

    When it comes to == comparision, unfortunately there is no rule of thumb nor a clear logic. This is probably because the various forms of the operator were implemented by different programmers, without a central design decision. The best I can do is providing you with this graph to print and stick over the monitor:

    PHP equality graph

    The key of the grap is: A == B will be TRUE if and only if A and B are of two types directly connected by a line in the graph above. For instance, array() == NULL is TRUE because array() and NULL are directly connected, while array() == 0 is FALSE because there is no line connecting the two.

    Lines marked in red are the tricky (non obvious) equalities.

    I've omitted that each entity will be equal to itself (e.g. "1" == "1" etc.) but that should be easy to remember.

    As a final note, I'd like to explain why "php" == 0 is TRUE (non empty, non number string is equal to 0): because PHP casts "php" to number before comparision and, since it's not a number, it defaults to 0 and makes the test TRUE.

    Fun fact: there is no partition in this relation! If ever a transitive closure was allowed, you could easily say that True is False and False is True, destroying millennia of philosphy in four easy PHP statements :D

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  • 2021-02-10 01:10

    If the value contains something then it can be said to be true. For example, 1, 1.123, array("value"), etc. are all treated as true.

    If the value can be said to be empty or void (i.e. lacking something) then it is seen as false. For example, 0, 0.0, array(), and so on.

    This way of thinking about variables is not special to PHP. Many other languages do it in the same or similar way. E.g. Perl, C and Javascript, just to name a few.

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