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this may seem like a stupid question, but it is stumping me nontheless. I'm sure that the answer is something small. I think it's just one of those situations where I have been looking at the code for too long.

I am trying to compare two PHP variables to see if they are the same. As you can see below, I am comparing $verification_answer with strrev(date("Ymd")) which is today's date, reversed. So today, $verification_answer would be 31700102. Every time I try to do the comparison, however, the if statement executes (as a non-match).

$verification_answer = strrev(date("Ymd"));

if($verification != $verification_answer){
     $failed .= "<h2>Attention:</h2><p>The verification code is incorrect. Please try again.</p>"; 
}

Can anyone see the issue? Thanks!


UPDATE: $verification is from HTML user input:

$verification = mysql_escape_string($_POST['verification']);
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  • Please post what $verification is. Jul 14, 2010 at 0:24
  • what is the value of $verification? Where does it come from?
    – jigfox
    Jul 14, 2010 at 0:27
  • $verification is from HTML user input. I have ensured (by echo()) that after the form is submitted, both $verification and $verification_answer display as the same values
    – littleK
    Jul 14, 2010 at 0:36
  • Note that mysql_escape_string() has been deprecated since php 4.3.0. You should be using mysql_real_escape_string() instead. php.net/manual/en/function.mysql-escape-string.php Jul 14, 2010 at 0:45
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    Try var_dump instead of echo. It's hard to see differences in whitespace with echo. Jul 14, 2010 at 1:48

3 Answers 3

6

There's nothing wrong with the if statement. Display the two values and you should see some sort of difference:

var_dump($verification);
var_dump($verification_answer);

Perhaps $verification doesn't contain what you think it does, or you misspelled it earlier and assigned to a different variable, or...

3

I am comparing $verification_answer with strrev(date("Ymd"))

If that's actually what you intended to do, I think you messed up the name of the variable in the first line; it should be:

$verification = strrev(date("Ymd"));

If you accidentally overwrote the value of $verification_answer and used $verification in a comparison when it's undefined, the comparison will always be false. PHP will emit a warning, but if you have them disabled you won't see it

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  • Woops, that was just a typo while typing the post.
    – littleK
    Jul 14, 2010 at 0:40
0

I must have spelled verification wrong somewhere...I copy and pasted 'verification' over each existing variable name and it fixed the problem. Thanks!

1
  • 1
    If you turn on warnings in php.ini while you're developing it'll help avoid this sort of thing Jul 14, 2010 at 0:58

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