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I have recently started using Zend Studio which has reported as warning the following type of code:

$q = query("select * from some_table where some_condition");
while ($f = fetch($q)) {
  // some inner workings
}

To stop the warning the code needs to be written like this:

$q = query("select * from some_table where some_condition");
$f = fetch($q);
while ($f) {
  // some inner workings
  $f = fetch($q);
}

Why is this marked as a warning? Is it so bad?

I understand that the warning may be designed to stop errors like this:

$a = 1;
while ($a = 1) {
  // some inner workings
  $a++;
}

which will never terminate because 1 is being assigned to $a which in turn returns 1 to the while statement, rather than being tested against $a and returning false to the while statement when $a is not 1.

Easy error to make which may validate a warning, granted, but so is forgetting to add the extra $f = fetch($q) at the end of the while block in the second example which will also result in a loop that will never terminate. If I change my code to remove the warning and then forget to add the $f = fetch($q) at the end of the while block Zend won't warning be about that!

So by removing the warning concerning a common error I'm setting myself up for a different common error.

Out of the pan, into the fire.

flag

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2 Answers

vote up 3 vote down

This is probably marked as a warning because people often use "=" by mistake when they mean "==".

eg:

$a = 1
while($a = 1) {
   $a++;
}

This will never terminate, though if you thought you'd written "==", it should.

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This is of course due to PHP's choice of = (equals) as the assignment operator, as opposed to say := (colon equals). – garrow Mar 10 '09 at 13:13
PHP's choice was influenced by C. As has just about every other language. Don't blame PHP for something C made popular. – epochwolf Mar 10 '09 at 13:36
vote up 0 vote down

The reason it's bad is alot of people use "=" when then meant "=="

The = operator will return the assigment to the left so if you use if($x=true) the code within the if will be run, if you use if($x=false) the code will not be run. It's a neat trick that can save a line or two of code but it's also dangerous because if you meant if($x == false) and typed if($x = false) it will be a bug that can be difficult to track down.

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