Michael wrote:
I'm not sure why the === operator does not handle this condition, since the 
wonderful people at PHP foresaw the problem and fixed !== to handle it, I would 
like to see the === fixed to handle this as well (if it is even possible, not 
sure about how this is implemented??)

This would not be a 'fix', this would be a break. Since !== and === are checking type *and* value, the logical truth of one does not necessarily mean the other will be false. Once you understand that it should all become clear.

If anyone sees anything I did wrong that is causing this behavior PLEASE let me know, I 
am no PHP "Guru" and I have no ego, and will humbly retract this post if I am 
wrong. I would just like to know WHY and WHERE I am wrong :)=

You're not doing anything wrong, you're just not quite getting the meaning of === and !== as opposed to == and !=.

-Stut

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