160

Based on the examples from this page, I wanted to convert the below if statement to a ternary operator.

Working code using if statement:

if (!empty($address['street2'])) echo $address['street2'].'<br />';

I am not sure how this should be written using a ternary operator so that the echo works only if street2 exists in the array and is not an empty string.

1
  • 2
    Your question is fooling some volunteers and researchers because you are not writing an assignment using a shorthand ternary expression (there is no "Elvis Operator") -- you are writing a longhand ternary expression. The difference is that you are declaring both of the returned values depending on the evaluation. In a shorthand evaluation, if the input value is "truthy", it is returned; if it is "falsey" then the fallback value is returned (this is the value declared after the Elvis Operator). There is also a noticeably poor implementation of the Null Coalescing Operator here too. Apr 14, 2020 at 2:39

16 Answers 16

299

The

(condition) ? /* value to return if condition is true */ 
            : /* value to return if condition is false */ ;

syntax is not a "shorthand if" operator (the ? is called the conditional operator) because you cannot execute code in the same manner as if you did:

if (condition) {
    /* condition is true, do something like echo */
}
else {
    /* condition is false, do something else */
}

In your example, you are executing the echo statement when the $address is not empty. You can't do this the same way with the conditional operator. What you can do however, is echo the result of the conditional operator:

echo empty($address['street2']) ? "Street2 is empty!" : $address['street2'];

and this will display "Street is empty!" if it is empty, otherwise it will display the street2 address.

3
  • 2
    It's the difference between statement and expression
    – pmiranda
    May 9, 2019 at 20:41
  • 5
    whats the shorthand again? condition ?: false which evaluates to condition if its true?
    – oldboy
    Jul 26, 2019 at 6:09
  • how about if 3 condition? it still work?
    – Leopoldz
    Mar 5, 2021 at 2:57
55

PHP 7+

As of PHP 7, this task can be performed simply by using the Null coalescing operator like this :

echo $address['street2'] ?? 'Empty';
10
  • 8
    Just FYI, if $address['street2'] is an empty string. It will accept it and won't return 'Empty'. isset() != empty(). This will only work if the value is null
    – AFwcxx
    Jul 31, 2018 at 6:41
  • 2
    What is the output if $address['street2'] is not empty?
    – AliN11
    Oct 17, 2019 at 12:36
  • 10
    Signed in just to downvote this answer. This doesn't do at all what's advertised.
    – TKoL
    Nov 26, 2019 at 16:05
  • 12
    THIS ANSWER IS WRONG! Proof: ideone.com/bLJM55 It echoes out the result of !empty($address['street2']) which is true, and PHP's echo will print this as 1. Yeah, bizarre, but that's how it is.
    – Sliq
    Aug 5, 2021 at 17:30
  • 2
    empty() NEVER returns null, so ?? will never give the desired result. I absolutely HATE when incorrect answers poison the Stack Overflow knowledge pool and give provably incorrect advice to researchers! Aug 11, 2021 at 22:52
33

Basic True / False Declaration

$is_admin = ($user['permissions'] == 'admin' ? true : false);

Conditional Welcome Message

echo 'Welcome '.($user['is_logged_in'] ? $user['first_name'] : 'Guest').'!';

Conditional Items Message

echo 'Your cart contains '.$num_items.' item'.($num_items != 1 ? 's' : '').'.';

ref: https://davidwalsh.name/php-ternary-examples

5
  • 4
    you got it from the short hand website and didn't even reference it
    – Richard
    Apr 10, 2019 at 12:33
  • 1
    @Richard added references Dec 23, 2019 at 10:00
  • Is it ? In the context of StackOverflow it's always a thin line, I mean the Q asked for something, unable to find it by him/herself, and then somebody else delivered this content. Is it unfair to copy existing content if it helps and adds value to this Q/A ? I think answers on StackOverflow are not "your own content" ... hmmm
    – Sliq
    Feb 2, 2020 at 17:44
  • 2
    First example is incorrect. The ) is misplaced. It should precede the ?. The complete statement should be $is_admin = ($user['permissions'] == 'admin') ? true : false; Jul 31, 2020 at 22:00
  • Also, completely useless without an eplanation of what the examples do. Jan 17, 2022 at 22:46
28

It's the Ternary operator a.k.a Elvis operator (google it :P) you are looking for.

echo $address['street2'] ?: 'Empty'; 

It returns the value of the variable or default if the variable is empty.

2
  • 1
    @Structed I can't disagree with what you say but, googling for this will give you the propper result and it's an easier term to remind Dec 10, 2018 at 14:51
  • 1
    Correct answer! The other upvoted answer from 2017 is not working!
    – Sliq
    Aug 5, 2021 at 17:33
15

The ternary operator is just a shorthand for and if/else block. Your working code does not have an else condition, so is not suitable for this.

The following example will work:

echo empty($address['street2']) ? 'empty' : 'not empty';
13

Quick and short way:

echo $address['street2'] ? : "No";

Here are some interesting examples, with one or more varied conditions.

$color = "blue";

// Example #1 Show color without specifying variable 
echo $color ? : "Undefined";
echo "<br>";

// Example #2
echo $color ? $color : "Undefined";
echo "<br>";

// Example #3
echo ($color) ? $color : "Undefined";
echo "<br>";

// Example #4
echo ($color == "blue") ? $color : "Undefined";
echo "<br>";

// Example #5
echo ($color == "" ? $color : ($color == "blue" ? $color : "Undefined"));
echo "<br>";

// Example #6
echo ($color == "blue" ? $color : ($color == "" ? $color : ($color == "" ? $color : "Undefined")));
echo "<br>";

// Example #7
echo ($color != "") ? ($color != "" ? ($color == "blue" ? $color : "Undefined") : "Undefined") : "Undefined";
echo "<br>";

Update in PHP 7+

// Check if the value exists
echo $_GET['user'] ?? "Undefined"; 
// Before isset($_GET['user']) ? $_GET['user'] : 'undefined';

// Multiple conditions can be added
echo $_GET['user'] ?? $_POST['user'] ?? $color ?? 'Undefined';
0
5

Note that when using nested conditional operators, you may want to use parenthesis to avoid possible issues!

It looks like PHP doesn't work the same way as at least Javascript or C#.

$score = 15;
$age = 5;

// The following will return "Exceptional"
echo 'Your score is: ' . ($score > 10 ? ($age > 10 ? 'Average' : 'Exceptional') : ($age > 10 ? 'Horrible' : 'Average'));

// The following will return "Horrible"
echo 'Your score is: ' . ($score > 10 ? $age > 10 ? 'Average' : 'Exceptional' : $age > 10 ? 'Horrible' : 'Average');

The same code in Javascript and C# return "Exceptional" in both cases.

In the 2nd case, what PHP does is (or at least that's what I understand):

  1. is $score > 10? yes
  2. is $age > 10? no, so the current $age > 10 ? 'Average' : 'Exceptional' returns 'Exceptional'
  3. then, instead of just stopping the whole statement and returning 'Exceptional', it continues evaluating the next statement
  4. the next statement becomes 'Exceptional' ? 'Horrible' : 'Average' which returns 'Horrible', as 'Exceptional' is truthy

From the documentation: http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php

It is recommended that you avoid "stacking" ternary expressions. PHP's behaviour when using more than one ternary operator within a single statement is non-obvious.

0
2

Conditional Welcome Message

echo 'Welcome '.($user['is_logged_in'] ? $user['first_name'] : 'Guest').'!';

Nested PHP Shorthand

echo 'Your score is:  '.($score > 10 ? ($age > 10 ? 'Average' : 'Exceptional') : ($age > 10 ? 'Horrible' : 'Average') );
2

You can do this even shorter by replacing echo with <?= code ?>

<?=(empty($storeData['street2'])) ? 'Yes <br />' : 'No <br />'?>

This is useful especially when you want to determine, inside a navbar, whether the menu option should be displayed as already visited (clicked) or not:

<li<?=($basename=='index.php' ? ' class="active"' : '')?>><a href="index.php">Home</a></li>

1
  • Are ()'s needed in that <?=?> method?
    – curls
    Sep 17, 2018 at 6:11
2

if else php shorthand ?

Try this

  ($value == 1) ? "selected" : "";
0

I think you used the brackets the wrong way. Try this:

$test = (empty($address['street2']) ? 'Yes <br />' : 'No <br />');

I think it should work, you can also use:

echo (empty($address['street2']) ? 'Yes <br />' : 'No <br />');
0
0

There's also a shorthand ternary operator and it looks like this:

(expression1) ?: expression2 will return expression1 if it evaluates to true or expression2 otherwise.

Example:

$a = 'Apples';
echo ($a ?: 'Oranges') . ' are great!';

will return

Apples are great!

Since PHP 5.3, it is possible to leave out the middle part of the ternary operator. Expression expr1 ?: expr3 returns expr1 if expr1 evaluates to TRUE, and expr3 otherwise.

From the PHP Manual

0
0

I think you probably should not use ternary operator in php. Consider next example:

<?php

function f1($n) {
    var_dump("first funct");
    return $n == 1;
}

function f2($n) {
    var_dump("second funct");
    return $n == 2;
}


$foo = 1;
$a = (f1($foo)) ? "uno" : (f2($foo)) ? "dos" : "tres";
print($a);

How do you think, what $a variable will contain? (hint: dos) And it will remain the same even if $foo variable will be assigned to 2.

To make things better you should either refuse to using this operator or surround right part with braces in the following way:

$a = (f1($foo)) ? "uno" : ((f2($foo)) ? "dos" : "tres");
0

Ternary Operator is basically shorthand for if/else statement. We can use to reduce few lines of code and increases readability.

Your code looks cleaner to me. But we can add more cleaner way as follows-

$test = (empty($address['street2'])) ? 'Yes <br />' : 'No <br />';

Another way-

$test = ((empty($address['street2'])) ? 'Yes <br />' : 'No <br />');

Note- I have added bracket to whole expression to make it cleaner. I used to do this usually to increase readability. With PHP7 we can use Null Coalescing Operator / php 7 ?? operator for better approach. But your requirement it does not fit.

0


I dont think i found the answer in all the above solutions. Some are also wrong.

To tests if a variable (or an element of an array, or a property of an object) exists (and is not null) use: echo isset($address['street2']) ? $address['street2'] : 'Empty';

To tests if a variable (...) contains some non-empty data use:
echo !empty($address['street2']) ? $address['street2'] : 'Empty';

-1

If first variable($a) is null, then assign value of second variable($b) to first variable($a)

 $a = 5;
 $b = 10;   

 $a != ''?$a: $a = $b;

 echo $a;

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