-1

In Javascript we can do this by following code:

function test(a) { 
  a && (console.log("somthing"), executeOtherFunction()); 
}

this code above is shorthand of:

function test(a){
  if(a){
    console.log("something");
    executeOtherFunction()
  }
}

Is possible to get this working for PHP?

I don't mean that use console.log in PHP, just want use same thing in PHP.

3
  • Why not just console.log('first','second')? And what do you want to do in PHP? Cause PHP doesn't have console.log.
    – putvande
    Nov 4, 2013 at 9:17
  • You can do $a ? action : action
    – Ahmad
    Nov 4, 2013 at 9:19
  • 1
    echo $a != false ? 'first' : 'second'
    – Royal Bg
    Nov 4, 2013 at 9:20

3 Answers 3

2

It looks this works in PHP.

function test(a) { 
  a && (console_log("somthing") xor executeOtherFunction()); 
}

I think PHP is able to convert everything to bool without errors.

1
  • +1 - xor must evaluate both sides to determine the result, and everything can either be truthy or falsy and therefore cast to boolean. Nov 4, 2013 at 11:22
2

In PHP, there is also short-circuit in condition evaluation. With an AND (or &&), the evaluation will stop as soon as a false value is encountered.

But, the comma , operator is not supported by PHP. So, you can't execute two expressions by separating them with a ,. It is only allowed, as a syntactic sugar, in a for loop:

for ($a = 2, $b = 4; $a < 3; $a++)
           ^

This construction is also often used with or keyword:

someAction() or log("someAction() execution failed");

This will log the error only if someAction() returns false.

0
0

As Guillaume Poussel said, PHP knows short circuit in condition evaluation, but not chaining of code blocks via ,.

If you are willing to really abuse PHP's weak typing system, you could use something like this:

if ($a && function1() . function2() ) ;
                      ^ concatenate the results of the functions as strings

obviously this would only work if you don't need the return values of the functions.

disclaimer: I don't recommend the use of this in production code, but it is an interesting thought experiment

2
  • It looks the . operator may have problems with objects without __toString() method.
    – Michas
    Nov 4, 2013 at 10:14
  • sure, this is quite dirty. It would not crash, though: an object without a user defined __toString() method will be converted to the string 'object'
    – cypherabe
    Nov 4, 2013 at 10:49

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