What will the following code print? print ‘’four’’ * 200;
-
8Why not just try it?– balpha ♦Jul 1, 2009 at 12:21
-
2He's testing us to see how knowledgeable we are before asking his real question– Vinko Vrsalovic ♦Jul 1, 2009 at 12:22
-
Why not read other questions and answers? There's a ton of knowledge here.– C. RossJul 1, 2009 at 12:24
-
I actually wanted to have a explanation for this, thanks for Conrad's comment. I needed to ask the question in a different manner ;-) Sorry Guys ;-)– ElitmiarJul 1, 2009 at 12:27
-
The question is quite OK, it should just have read 'Why is "four" * 200 === 0 in PHP'– soulmergeJul 1, 2009 at 12:28
3 Answers
It prints "0" alt text http://mywebprogrammer.com/images/soAnswer.PNG
The result is to the left of the second line.
To see why this is you can do a quick test echo (int)'four';
this will attempt to explicitly cast the string 'four' to an integer which since it is not an integer will technicaly fail, resulting in a 0 which of course is equal to FALSE. If you replace the 'four' with '4', still a string, you can properly cast it to an integer and it will produce the result of 800 in the case of your example ("print '4' * 200").
Yes it would print zero "0" indeed. The thing is PHP will type cast the string value to an integer. This would result in 0 (Zero); and if you times any value with zero you'll get zero.
Good Question Roland!
Since the string cannot be casted to a number, the multiplication with a string will result in 0.
-
Numeric strings can be casted to the integer they represent though.– Vinko Vrsalovic ♦Jul 2, 2009 at 4:54