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Waqar Ahmed
Waqar Ahmed

Posted on • Edited on • Originally published at Medium

PHP Tricky True False Examples

The result of a PHP True False statement might be different from what looks like a simple and logical result.

PHP Comparison Operators == VS ===

PHP with loosely == operator will not compare type, so numeric strings will be converted to numbers and compared numerically. Below are two examples: for more on PHP comparisons, check the PHP.net page.

var_dump(0 == "a"); // 0 == 0 -> true
var_dump(10 == "1e1"); // 10 == 10 -> true

PHP strict comparison === will not convert string to a numeral. It compares both: type and the value. So examples above, comparing two of the different types, will always be false.

var_dump("1" === "01"); // 0 == "a" -> false
var_dump("10" === "1e1"); // 10 == "1e1" -> false

StackOverflow user Nick has added nice detailed comparison tables of == and === operators with TRUE, FALSE, NULL, 0, 1, -1, ‘0’, ‘1’, ‘-1’.

PHP TRUE, FALSE

In PHP: an undeclared variable, empty array, “0”, 0 and empty string are false while -1 is true. Here are some more TRUE, FALSE examples.

PHP STRINGS

var_dump((bool) "");        // bool(false)
var_dump((bool) "0");       // bool(false)
var_dump((bool) "1");       // bool(true)
var_dump((bool) "alpha");   // bool(true)
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PHP INT, FLOAT

var_dump((bool) 1);           // bool(true)
var_dump((bool) -1);          // bool(true)
var_dump((bool) 2.3e5);       // bool(true)
var_dump((bool) -2);          // bool(true)
var_dump((bool) 0.0);         // bool(false)
var_dump((bool) -0.1);        // bool(true)
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PHP ARRAYS

var_dump((bool) array());    // bool(false)
var_dump((bool) array(5));   // bool(true)
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OTHERS

var_dump((bool) "false");   // bool(true)
var_dump((bool) NULL);      // bool(false)
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PHP Functions

Return values of some commonly used PHP core functions might break the conditional flow by returning NULL or int() integer values. For example stripos() can return 0 which will be interpreted as false in an IF conditional block.

$text = 'abc xyz';
$pos = strpos($text, 'a');
var_dump($pos);  
//result: int(0) 
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This code will return true with the output of string position int(0). This return value zero evaluates to the false.

if (!strpos($text, 'a')) {echo "'a' not found in '$text'";}
//result: 'a' not found in 'abc xyz'
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Above code will detect “a” but if block will evaluate to false as a’s position is 0.
Instead, explicitly check if the value returned is not FLASE

if(strpos($text, 'a') === FALSE){echo "'a' not found in '$text'";}
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Top comments (2)

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nicolus profile image
Nicolus

My favorite :

define('TRUE', false);
define('FALSE', true);
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waqar profile image
Waqar Ahmed

:) from now on, I will always check constants before refactoring a code.