The way I understand it, the following is allowed in PHP because it's a weakly-typed language.

$var = 'Hello';
$var = 5;

I just installed a Windows version of Python 2.6 and I was expecting it NOT to let me change type just like that, but the Python equivalent of the above code works just like in PHP yikes!

>>> var = "Hello"
>>> type(var)
<type 'str'>
>>> var = 5
>>> type(var)
<type 'int'>

Is my understanding of weak/strong typing flawed?

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Python is a dynamic language so it's weakly typed in some sense and strongly typed in other (there's no single definition) but the whole question is lot more complicated than that. See wiki.python.org/moin/StrongVsWeakTyping – DrJokepu Jan 8 '10 at 3:46
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4 Answers

up vote 22 down vote accepted

Your example demonstrates dynamic typing, not weak typing. Dynamic typing generally means that the type of data an object can store is mutable; any target may hold a binding to any kind of object. Contrast that with, say, C#, which is statically typed [*].

int i = 5; // Okay.
i = "5";   // Illegal! i can only hold integers.

Strong typing means that once assigned a value of a particular kind, objects obey strict rules about how they can interact with other objects of various types. Weak typing means that such rules are more relaxed. This doesn't mean that strongly typed languages are necessarily superior in any way; it's just a language design choice.

Python is considered strongly typed because objects have a distinct notion of what they type they are. Incompatible operations between objects cause errors:

>>> 1 + 1          # Add two integers.
2
>>> "1" + "1"      # Concatenate two strings.
'11'
>>> 1 + int("1")   # Add two integers.
2
>>> "1" + str(1)   # Concatenate two strings.
'11'
>>> 1 + "1"        # Undefined! Adding integers and strings is meaningless.
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "", line 5, in ?
TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'int' and 'str'

But in PHP, the rules are much more relaxed about what is acceptable. Thus it is considered more weakly typed than some other languages.

$x = 1 + "1"; // x is 2

[*] Technically, as of C# 4, C# is statically typed but with opt-in dynamic typing on a per-binding basis, thanks to the dynamic keyword. A lot of languages these days are adding dynamic capabilities and blurring the lines, so it's becoming increasingly harder to say that "language X is dynamic" and "language Y is static". It's much more of a sliding scale or a spectrum than it is a binary property.

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I think you mean 2 for that last one, not '11'. – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams Jan 8 '10 at 3:47
Whoops, thanks Ignacio. – John Feminella Jan 8 '10 at 3:48
Oh, I see. I had it mixed up. If I want a statically-typed language for the Web, I should probably go with C# or Java then. – confused Jan 8 '10 at 3:52
Well, I have written a CGI app in C++ before, but I don't recommend it. – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams Jan 8 '10 at 3:57
confused: if you like Pythons syntax, check Boo language for the CLR platform. For the JVM Scala gives you a lot more type checking and less verbose code. – Ants Aasma Jan 8 '10 at 11:33
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There's no real definition of weak typing or strong typing. Its all about implicit type conversions and has nothing to do with static/dynamic typing.

A statically typed language like Java can be weakly typed (not that is it), and a dynamically typed language like PHP can be strongly typed (not that it is).

A weakly typed language is more liberal in what data types can be mixed in certain operations.

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wrong!the biggest php problem that she weak types lang, because that you can have hidden bugs in code like undefined variables, functions etc..- maintain web app of php very hard only because that reason – Yosef Apr 22 '11 at 9:14
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One addition the the first answer: It's a tad more complicated because in python the + operator is overloaded meaning it would both add (math) and concatenate (glue two strings). In the php example

$i = 1 + "1" // $i == 2

the plus adds (math) because the . (dot) is used for concatenation, so in php

$i = 1 . "1" // $i == "11"

What I'm trying to make clear is that every weakly typed / dynamic language deals with this in it's own way.

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Yes. That is not strong/weak typing, that is static/dynamic typing. Weak typing allows things such as 5 + '5' to equal 10.

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Interesting -- so Java would be weakly-type, at least in the relationship of primitive numbers and Strings. – Kaleb Brasee Jan 8 '10 at 3:48
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