Not sure if there are still people looking for an explanation and a solution. The comments above say it all on the differences between TRUE / FALSE / 1 / 0.
I would just like to bring my 2 cents for the way to display the actual value.
BOOLEAN
If you're working with a Boolean datatype, you're looking for a TRUE vs. FALSE result; if you store it in MySQL, it will be stored as 1 resp. 0 (if I'm not mistaking, this is the same in your server's memory).
So to display the the value in PHP, you need to check if it is true (1) or false (0) and display whatever you want: "TRUE" or "FALSE" or possibly "1" or "0".
Attention, everything bigger (or different) than 0 will also be considered as TRUE in PHP. E.g.: 2, "abc", etc. will all return TRUE.
BIT, TINYINT
If you're working with a number datatype, the way it is stored is the same.
To display the value, you need to tell PHP to handle it as a number. The easiest way I found is to multiply it by 1.
empty
is perhaps the most useful yet widely misunderstood PHP function. Learn how and when to use it.empty
is essentially short forisset($var) && $var != false
. You must be holding yourempty
very weird to shoot yourself in the foot with this. ;Pfalse
without triggering an "undefined variable" error is useless? Oh well, guess you never do this… 3) Choosing the wrong function in a security context doesn't mean the function itself is bad, useless or inconsistent; it just means somebody chose the wrong function for the job.empty()
, then it has probably the wrong name.emptyOrZero()
would be better, but this would not say anything aboutFALSE
or'0.0'
(which is handled different from0.0
). I suspect this function was written to interpret the input of HTML input elements, so why not write a function that says so, maybe the opposite:isHtmlInputSet()
. Anyway, we can't change it, so it is as you said, learn how it works :-)