[snip]
The value of the expression is the value assigned. Since the ! operator
will always return a boolean then the assigned value is going to be a
boolean. So $r will always contain a boolean for the purposes of the
ternary operation.

And it also work if the statement is not ternary
[/snip]

And now for a little clarity. THIS is not a ternary

if($r = !$r)

it is a conditional test.

? foo : bar;

...is the ternary operation. Just wanted to clean up the usage there.

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