2

I have this function which takes the average user rating given to an item and converts it to a relevant class:

function get_user_rating_class($urate_ave){
    if($urate_ave==='0.0'){
        $user_rating_class='unrated_u';
    }else{
        $round_to = 0.5;
        $rounded = round($urate_ave / $round_to) * $round_to;
        $removedec = str_replace('.','',$rounded);
        if(strlen($removedec)<2){$removedec.'0';}
        $user_rating_class='rating_user_'+$removedec;
    }
    return $user_rating_class;
}

No when I put a value, say 3.0 into the function it should come out as rating_user_30 but instead it is coming out as rating_user_3, so there must be something wrong with this line:

if(strlen($removedec)<2){$removedec.'0';}

I thought it might be because It was treating the value $removedec as a number rather than a string so I tried adding this line just before it, but no change:

$removedec = strval($removedec);

Could someone tell me what I am doing wrong here.

4
  • please fire whoever came up with $urate_ave. thanks. Or at least buy him Clean Code by Robert Martin.
    – Gordon
    Oct 2, 2012 at 13:04
  • Can you explain what you mean, just googled robert martin and there are a lot about.
    – SwiftD
    Oct 2, 2012 at 13:21
  • Code is much more often read than it is written. Thus, code should be readable. Using abbreviations like $urate_ave instead of average_user_rating makes your code unreadable. The few keystrokes you save with the abbreviation are not worth the readability you sacrifice there. Someone seeing that urate_ave will have a hard time figuring out what it means. As for Clean Code: amazon.com/Clean-Code-Handbook-Software-Craftsmanship/dp/…
    – Gordon
    Oct 2, 2012 at 13:25
  • I do agree and I do tend to use more descriptive variable names now (much like my function names - get_user_rating_class) - this is part of some old code that I am reworking. However, as for it not being clear what it means - you seem to have cracked my code. Thanks for the link, I'll check it out.
    – SwiftD
    Oct 2, 2012 at 13:31

3 Answers 3

9

You should use .= instead of . to append a value to a string and set the variable to that value. The dot operator alone will append the value but not change the variable's value.

$removedec .= '0';
2
  • silly mistake... thanks. My trailing numbers are coming out fine now, but I have lost an underscore, e.g I am getting rating_user 30 instead of user_rating_30, for a bonus point can you see how I've managed that one?
    – SwiftD
    Oct 2, 2012 at 12:55
  • Never mind, I used a + instead of a . - I guess thats the problem flipping between js and php
    – SwiftD
    Oct 2, 2012 at 12:57
1

Yes, you are right that line is wrong, you forgot to assign the value, like this:

if(strlen($removedec)<2){$removedec=$removedec.'0';}
0

Suppose there is a integer variable and you do not know what the value is then:

$var = 0;
$str = "var is : " . ($var?$var:'0');

attache the value at the end of string.

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