You don't want the fastest but the most readable way. And that's in_array() (JavaScript: array.indexOf(value) >= 0) for more than 2 or 3 values.
The performance difference is negligible - while a function call and array creation certainly has some overhead, it doesn't matter compared to expensive operations such a file access, database access, network access, etc.. So in the end nobody will notice the difference.
Here's a short benchmark, each with 1 million iterations:
5.4829950332642 - in_array, the array is recreated everytime
2.9785749912262 - in_array, the array is created only once
0.64996600151062 - isset(), the array way created only once and then the values were turned to keys using array_flip()
2.0508298873901 - ||
So, the fastest, yet still very readable way is this. Unless you create $arr only once and use it many times, there is no need for this and you can simply stay with in_array().
$arr = array_flip(array('your', 'list', 'of', 'values'));
if(isset($arr[$value])) ...
In case you did ask for JavaScript (in this case get rid of those $ prefixes!), the best solution is using Array.indexOf():
['a', 'b', 'c'].indexOf(value) >= 0
However, not all browsers already support Array.indexOf(), so you might want to use e.g. the function from Underscore.js:
_.contains(['a', 'b', 'c'], value)
jQuery also has a function for this:
$.inArray(value, ['a', 'b', 'c'])
The fastest way would be with an object and the in operator, but the object definition is less readable than the array definition:
value in {'a':0, 'b':0, 'c':0}
Here's a JSPerf benchmark for the various solutions: http://jsperf.com/inarray-vs-or - but again, the rather big performance difference is negligible in most cases since you are not going to execute the code millions of times in a loop.
inArray()more just for the fact that it has greater potential to be dynamic for large countercheck data sets. As well as being easier to read. Just imagine if we had 10 or so values to countercheck! :D – Richard Neil Ilagan May 7 '12 at 8:42