I have tried this code
$a = array_fill(0, 4, NULL);
$a[0]++;
++$a[1];
$a[2]--;
--$a[3];
var_dump($a);
Result:
array(4) {
[0]=> int(1)
[1]=> int(1)
[2]=> NULL
[3]=> NULL
}
Why value of 2 and 3 index is not negative?
Weird, but documented on the Incrementing/Decrementing Operators php doc page:
Note: The increment/decrement operators do not affect boolean values. Decrementing NULL values has no effect too, but incrementing them results in 1.
Use the source, Luke
As usual, the answer lies in the source. PHP uses the following two functions internally to perform the increment and decrement operations:
ZEND_API int increment_function(zval *op1)
ZEND_API int decrement_function(zval *op1)
These operations modify the op1
argument based on its type (NULL
is a type); inside increment_function()
you can see the following branch in the code:
case IS_NULL:
ZVAL_LONG(op1, 1);
break;
The above code changes the type of op1
into a number and sets its value to 1
.
Conversely, decrement_function()
offers no such branch and therefore the default action will be performed:
default:
return FAILURE;
Running this code won't actually yield any observable failure, because the return values are absorbed in the Zend VM, but the variable definitely isn't updated either.
It's not a bug(tm)
You may be surprised to know that this behaviour, including that for boolean values, is actually documented:
Note: The increment/decrement operators do not affect boolean values. Decrementing
NULL
values has no effect too, but incrementing them results in1
.
Regarding booleans:
$a = true;
var_dump($a--); // true
$a = false;
var_dump($a++); // false
Regarding strings:
$letter = 'A';
var_dump(++$letter); // B
var_dump(--$letter); // B
Strange. I don't know their deciding factor to this but looking at the source code, you'll see that if it's dealing with a NULL, it sets it to 1 (not increment).
case IS_NULL:
ZVAL_LONG(op1, 1);
break;
The decrement function doesn't deal with NULL at all and goes straight to FAILURE:
default:
return FAILURE;
As others mentioned, it is documented.
Note: The increment/decrement operators do not affect boolean values. Decrementing
NULL
values has no effect too, but incrementing them results in1
.
NULL
in PHP is really weird. It's all to do with the loosely-typed nature of the language