1

Is there another way of writing something like this?

$var2 = ($var1) ? $var1 : 'bar';

Example..

$var1 = 'foo';
$var2 = ($var1) ? $var1 : 'bar';
echo $var2; //Outputs foo

$var1 = false;
$var2 = ($var1) ? $var1 : 'bar';
echo $var2; //Outputs bar

I hoped

$var2 = $var1 || 'bar';

would work because I thought I've seen that before but it didn't. Any ideas?

Thanks!

3 Answers 3

4
$var2 = $var1 ?: 'bar';

New since PHP 5.3. http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php#language.operators.comparison.ternary

0
1

Almost correct. Since PHP 5.3 (I believe) there is a new construct:

<?php
$foo = false;
$foo = $foo ?: 'bar';

echo $foo; // $foo is now "bar".
-2

There is not prior to PHP 5.3.

If compatability to pre-5.3 versions of PHP is important I suggest making a method;

function b($a, $b) { return $a?$a:$b; }

B for best, as well as being short.

Usage:

echo b($username, "Not logged in");
0

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