The key difference here is between variables and values. The two items of code you refer to different concepts.
if (isset($var)) {
This tests to see if a variable has been set. The only other check it does is to see that $var
is not set to null
(since that is pretty much equivalent to unsetting it).
if ($var) {
This tests to see if the value that $var
refers to is truthy. This may seem like an odd concept, but sometimes non-intuitive things happen in PHP with comparisions. The conditional will pass if the value of $var
is anything that is true
when converted to a boolean. See the manual for a list of what is converted to true
and what is converted to false
.
Finally
There is often a case for using both. Because isset
is a language feature not a standard function, you can pass any variable name to it and it won't throw an error. It will merely return false
if the variable is not defined. However, if you try using a non-initialised variable outside that context, you'll get errors reported.
That's why you'll often see code that checks to see that the value is both set and truthy:
if (isset($var) && $var) {