After seeing some errors showing up in our apache logs, I've been trying to figure out 'why'. The errors related to a preg_match command where I was trying to find strings that started with a backslash character:
preg_match('/^\\/',$str)
It was reporting "preg_match(): No ending delimiter '/' found"
Out of curiousity I tried double instead of single quotes, and combinations from 1 to 6 backslashes and it always reports the same error. (I ended up switching the test to if(substr($str,0,1) == "\") {} instead for the time being)
substr($str, 0, 1) === '\\'
or even$str[0] === '\\'
?===
to realize that it is indeed required to eliminate false positives. Did you do that on purpose or just a good habit? Thanks for the "mental correction"! :-)'0' == '\\'
istrue
because the first is numeric. I need to stop using that language. ;-)===
.