Clancy schreef:
> While PHP has a lot of nice features, it also has some traps which I am 
> forever falling
> into. One which I find particularly hard to understand is how mixed mode 
> comparisons work.
> For instance 
> 
> $string =  'elephant';
> If($string == 0) returns true;
> If($string != 0) returns false;
> If($string === 0) returns false; 
> 
> I know that in this case I should use 'If($string == '')', but I still manage 
> to forget.
> Can anyone explain clearly why comparing a string with zero gives this 
> apparently
> anomalous result?

it's called auto-casting (or auto-typecasting) and it's 'by design'
... welcome to the world of dynamic typing.

try this to see it working:

php -r '
var_dump((integer)"elephant");
var_dump((float)"elephant");
var_dump((bool)"elephant");
var_dump((array)"elephant");
var_dump((object)"elephant");
var_dump((bool)(integer)"elephant");
'

you can avoid auto-casting if needed, in a variety of ways:

php -r '
$foo = "elephant";
if (!empty($foo))
        echo "$foo found!\n";
if (strlen($foo))
        echo "$foo found!\n";
if (is_string($foo) && strlen($foo))
        echo "$foo found!\n";
if ($foo !== "")
        echo "$foo found!\n";
if ($foo === "elephant")
        echo "$foo found!\n";
'

those last 2 show how to use 'type-checked' equality
testing.

> 


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