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Consider the following PHP statements:

echo ( 0  == '' ? 1 : 0); // Output is 1
echo ('0' == '' ? 1 : 0); // Output is 0

The first will print 1, and the second will print 0. Shouldn't they both print 0? Is this expected behavior? I'm guessing its because the second is a string and the first is not, but I'd like another answer.

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8 Answers 8

6

Read Loose comparisons with ==

http://php.net/manual/en/types.comparisons.php

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In Php empty string, NULL and 0 are equal. In second case '0' is another string, and '' is another. So you get result false.

"", 0, "0", False, array(), Null are all considered False in PHP.

You can use === to make them different.

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  • empty string, NULL, 0 and false are the same!
    – nico
    Feb 22, 2012 at 6:43
  • This is a misleading answer! Yes, all these are considered false, but false requires a boolean context. I.e. if (null) or null == false. That doesn't apply to a direct comparison to a non-boolean value. According to your answer both cases should result in 1, which they don't.
    – deceze
    Feb 22, 2012 at 6:48
  • No, I don't mean that. It's some kind of misspelling. I think our answer are equal, I mean same as you wrote. Feb 22, 2012 at 6:52
1

It's correct behavior. 0 is equal to empty string as well as to false/null.

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It is because the first line is not comparing two variables of the same type:

echo ( 0  == '' ? 1 : 0); // Output is 1
echo ('0' == '' ? 1 : 0); // Output is 0

Observe the following:

echo ( 0  === '' ? 1 : 0); // Output is 0

The === operator does a type sensitive equality check, which seems to be what you are expecting. == will do a bit of a fuzzy check if the two arguments are not of the same type.

You should check out the comparison operators documentation for more information:

If you compare a number with a string or the comparison involves numerical strings, then each string is converted to a number and the comparison performed numerically.

1

I think the first one is interpreting both the 0 and the empty string as "false" and they are coming out as equal. PHP has lots of quirks around what it will interpret as true/false. The second is comparing the string '0' to a blank string and coming up with unequal.

To make sure you compare actual values you should use the === comparison

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0 == '' == null

but '0' is a string.

You'd better use === to check the difference of 0, '0', null

php > var_dump(0);
int(0)
php > var_dump('0');
string(1) "0"
php > var_dump(null);
NULL
php > var_dump('');
string(0) ""
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You can find the comparison logic here: http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php

Type of Operand 1    Type of Operand 2    Result

null or string       string               Convert NULL to "", numerical or lexical comparison

string, resource     string, resource     Translate strings and resources to numbers, usual math
or number            or number

That means for '0' == '', the first case applies, and lexical comparison is used. And "0" and "" are not equal according to lexical comparison.

For 0 == '', the second case applies. '' is converted to a number, 0 in this case, which is equal to 0.

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'0' == '' will always be false. Because symbol '0' is not an empty symbol. But in PHP 0 (zero) and empty symbol are the same.

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