It seems that in PHP 7.1, a Warning will be emitted if a non-numeric value is encountered. See this link.
Here is the relevant portion that pertains to the Warning notice you are getting:
New E_WARNING and E_NOTICE errors have been introduced when invalid
strings are coerced using operators expecting numbers or their
assignment equivalents. An E_NOTICE is emitted when the string begins
with a numeric value but contains trailing non-numeric characters, and
an E_WARNING is emitted when the string does not contain a numeric
value.
I'm guessing either $sub_total
, $item['quantity']
or $product['price']
does not contain a numeric value, so you need to start debugging them, for example,
var_dump($sub_total, $item['quantity'], $product['price']);
and see which one is wrong and then fix the source of incorrect value.
When dealing with user input, make sure that values contain a numeric value before processing them. Maybe use some sort of conditional before calculating the $sub_total, like so:
<?php
if (!is_numeric($item['quantity']) || is_numeric($product['price'])) {
throw new InvalidArgumentException("Price or quantity does not contain a numeric value");
}
$sub_total += $item['quantity'] * $product['price'];
Only in a rare case, when you positively know that some certain non-numeric value can be used in calculations, you may cast it to numeric type. For example, in some legacy code an empty string can be used in calculations, which was silently cast to 0
in previous PHP versions. Here you can add a condition for this exact value:
$item['quantity'] = ($item['quantity'] === "" ? 0 : $item['quantity']);
$sub_total += $item['quantity'] * $product['price'];
this code will bypass an empty string but would warn you, if any other unexpected value will be encountered.
Better still, just make sure that $item['quantity']
is always of numeric type, preferably by using PHP's type hinting system.
var_dump($item['quantity'], $product['price'])