101

I have several older applications that throw a lot of "xyz is undefined" and "undefined offset" messages when running on the E_NOTICE error level, because the existence of variables is not explicitly checked using isset() and consorts.

I am considering working through them to make them E_NOTICE compatible, as notices about missing variables or offsets can be lifesavers, there may be some minor performance improvements to be gained, and it's overall the cleaner way.

However, I don't like what inflicting hundreds of isset() empty() and array_key_exists() s does to my code. It gets bloated, becomes less readable, without gaining anything in terms of value or meaning.

How can I structure my code without an excess of variable checks, while also being E_NOTICE compatible?

1
  • 6
    I agree completely. That's why I like Zend Framework so much, the request module is very good there. If I am working on some small app, I usually code some simple request class with magic methods __set and __get that works similar to ZF's request. That way I avoid all occurences of isset and empty in my code. That way all you need to use is either if (count($arr) > 0) on arrays before iterating over them and if (null !== $variable) at few critical places. It looks much cleaner. Nov 5, 2010 at 17:01

11 Answers 11

131

For those interested, I have expanded this topic into a small article, which provides the below information in a somewhat better structured form: The Definitive Guide To PHP's isset And empty


IMHO you should think about not just making the app "E_NOTICE compatible", but restructuring the whole thing. Having hundreds of points in your code that regularly try to use non-existent variables sounds like a rather badly structured program. Trying to access non-existent variables should never ever happen, other languages balk at this at compile time. The fact that PHP allows you to do it doesn't mean you should.

These warnings are there to help you, not to annoy you. If you get a warning "You're trying to work with something that doesn't exist!", your reaction should be "Oops, my bad, let me fix that ASAP." How else are you going to tell the difference between "variables that work just fine undefined" and honestly wrong code that may lead to serious errors? This is also the reason why you always, always, develop with error reporting turned to 11 and keep plugging away at your code until not a single NOTICE is issued. Turning error reporting off is for production environments only, to avoid information leakage and provide a better user experience even in the face of buggy code.


To elaborate:

You will always need isset or empty somewhere in your code, the only way to reduce their occurrence is to initialize your variables properly. Depending on the situation there are different ways to do that:

Function arguments:

function foo ($bar, $baz = null) { ... }

There's no need to check whether $bar or $baz are set inside the function because you just set them, all you need to worry about is if their value evaluates to true or false (or whatever else).

Regular variables anywhere:

$foo = null;
$bar = $baz = 'default value';

Initialize your variables at the top of a block of code in which you're going to use them. This solves the !isset problem, ensures that your variables always have a known default value, gives the reader an idea of what the following code will work on and thereby also serves as a sort of self-documentation.

Arrays:

$defaults = array('foo' => false, 'bar' => true, 'baz' => 'default value');
$values = array_merge($defaults, $incoming_array);

The same thing as above, you're initializing the array with default values and overwrite them with actual values.

In the remaining cases, let's say a template where you're outputting values that may or may not be set by a controller, you'll just have to check:

<table>
    <?php if (!empty($foo) && is_array($foo)) : ?>
        <?php foreach ($foo as $bar) : ?>
            <tr>...</tr>
        <?php endforeach; ?>
    <?php else : ?>
        <tr><td>No Foo!</td></tr>
    <?php endif; ?>
</table>

If you find yourself regularly using array_key_exists, you should evaluate what you're using it for. The only time it makes a difference is here:

$array = array('key' => null);
isset($array['key']); // false
array_key_exists('key', $array); // true

As stated above though, if you're properly initializing your variables, you don't need to check if the key exists or not, because you know it does. If you're getting the array from an external source, the value will most likely not be null but '', 0, '0', false or something like it, i.e. a value you can evaluate with isset or empty, depending on your intent. If you regularly set an array key to null and want it to mean anything but false, i.e. if in the above example the differing results of isset and array_key_exists make a difference to your program logic, you should ask yourself why. The mere existence of a variable shouldn't be important, only its value should be of consequence. If the key is a true/false flag, then use true or false, not null. The only exception to this would be 3rd party libraries that want null to mean something, but since null is so hard to detect in PHP I have yet to find any library that does this.

10
  • 4
    True, but most failing access attempts are along the lines of if ($array["xyz"]) instead of isset() or array_key_exists() which I find somewhat legitimate, certainly not structural problems (correct me if I'm mistaken). Adding array_key_exists() just looks like a terrible waste to me.
    – Pekka
    Dec 25, 2009 at 6:14
  • 9
    I can't think of any case where I'd use array_key_exists instead of a simple isset($array['key']) or !empty($array['key']). Sure, both add 7 or 8 characters to your code, but I'd hardly call that a problem. It also helps to clarify your code: if (isset($array['key'])) means this variable is indeed optional and may be absent, whereas if ($array['key']) just means "if true". If you get a notice for the latter one, you know your logic is screwed somewhere.
    – deceze
    Dec 25, 2009 at 7:15
  • 6
    I believe the difference between isset() and array_key_exists() is that the latter will return true if the value is NULL. isset() won't.
    – Htbaa
    Dec 25, 2009 at 12:31
  • 1
    True, but I couldn't think of a sane use case where I need to differenciate between a non-existent variable and a set key whos value is null. If the value evaluates to FALSE the distinction should be without a difference. :)
    – deceze
    Dec 25, 2009 at 13:10
  • 1
    Array keys are certainly more annoying than undefined variables. But if you're not sure whether an array contains a key or not, it means either you didn't define the array yourself or you're pulling it from a source that you don't control. Neither scenario should happen very often; and if it happens, you have every reason to check if the array contains what you think it does. It's a security measure IMO.
    – kijin
    Nov 3, 2010 at 5:33
38

Just write a function for that. Something like:

function get_string($array, $index, $default = null) {
    if (isset($array[$index]) && strlen($value = trim($array[$index])) > 0) {
        return get_magic_quotes_gpc() ? stripslashes($value) : $value;
    } else {
        return $default;
    }
}

which you can use as

$username = get_string($_POST, 'username');

Do the same for trivial stuff like get_number(), get_boolean(), get_array() and so on.

4
  • 5
    This looks good, and does magic_quotes checking as well. Nice!
    – Pekka
    Dec 25, 2009 at 6:11
  • 3
    Notice that $_POST['something'] may return array, e.g. inputs with <input name="something[]" />. This would cause error (as trim cannot be applied to arrays) using above code, in this case one should use is_string and possibly strval. This is not simply a case where one should use get_array either since user input (malicious) maybe anything and user input parser should never throw error anyway.
    – Ciantic
    Jul 10, 2012 at 12:29
  • 1
    I use the same kind of function but defined as such: function get_value(&$item, $default = NULL) { return isset($item) ? $item : $default; } The advantage of this function is that you can call it with arrays, variables and objects. The drawback is that the $item gets initialized (to null) afterwards if it was not.
    – Mat
    Aug 13, 2012 at 20:04
  • You should turn off magic quotes globally, instead of dealing with them in 1 function. There are plenty of sources on the internet explaining magic quotes.
    – Kayla
    Aug 15, 2014 at 2:49
13

I believe one of the best ways of coping with this problem is by accessing values of GET and POST (COOKIE, SESSION, etc.) arrays through a class.

Create a class for each of those arrays and declare __get and __set methods (overloading). __get accepts one argument which will be the name of a value. This method should check this value in the corresponding global array, either using isset() or empty() and return the value if it exists or null (or some other default value) otherwise.

After that you can confidently access array values in this manner: $POST->username and do any validation if needed without using any isset()s or empty()s. If username does not exist in the corresponding global array then null will be returned, so no warnings or notices will be generated.

4
  • 1
    This is a great idea, and something I'm ready to restructure code for. +1
    – Pekka
    Dec 25, 2009 at 15:10
  • Unfortunately you won't be able to make those instances superglobal unless you assign them to $_GET or $_POST which would be pretty ugly. But you could use static classes of course... Oct 24, 2010 at 12:38
  • 1
    You can't use getters and setters on "static classes". and writing one class per variable is bad practice as it implies code duplication, which is bad. I don't think this solution is the most adequate.
    – Mat
    Aug 13, 2012 at 20:06
  • A public static member of a class acts like a superglobal, ie: HTTP::$POST->username, where you instantiate HTTP::$POST at some point before its use, ie. Class HTTP { public static $POST = array();...}; HTTP::$POST = new someClass($_POST);...
    – velcrow
    Aug 19, 2013 at 18:10
6

I don't mind using the array_key_exists() function. In fact, I prefer using this specific function rather than relying on hack functions which may change their behavior in the future like empty and isset (strikedthrough to avoid susceptibilities).


I do however, use a simple function that comes handy in this, and some other situations in dealing with array indexes:

function Value($array, $key, $default = false)
{
    if (is_array($array) === true)
    {
        settype($key, 'array');

        foreach ($key as $value)
        {
            if (array_key_exists($value, $array) === false)
            {
                return $default;
            }

            $array = $array[$value];
        }

        return $array;
    }

    return $default;
}

Let's say you've the following arrays:

$arr1 = array
(
    'xyz' => 'value'
);

$arr2 = array
(
    'x' => array
    (
        'y' => array
        (
            'z' => 'value',
        ),
    ),
);

How do you get the "value" out of the arrays? Simple:

Value($arr1, 'xyz', 'returns this if the index does not exist');
Value($arr2, array('x', 'y', 'z'), 'returns this if the index does not exist');

We already have uni and multi-dimensional arrays covered, what else can we possibly do?


Take the following piece of code for instance:

$url = 'https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1960509';
$domain = parse_url($url);

if (is_array($domain) === true)
{
    if (array_key_exists('host', $domain) === true)
    {
        $domain = $domain['host'];
    }

    else
    {
        $domain = 'N/A';
    }
}
else
{
    $domain = 'N/A';
}

Pretty boring isn't it? Here is another approach using the Value() function:

$url = 'https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1960509';
$domain = Value(parse_url($url), 'host', 'N/A');

As an additional example, take the RealIP() function for a test:

$ip = Value($_SERVER, 'HTTP_CLIENT_IP', Value($_SERVER, 'HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR', Value($_SERVER, 'REMOTE_ADDR')));

Neat, huh? ;)

15
  • 6
    "Relying on hack functions that may change their behavior in the future"?! Sorry, but that's about the most ridiculous thing I've heard all week. First of all, isset and empty are language constructs, not functions. Secondly, if any core library functions/language constructs change their behavior, you may or may not be screwed. What if array_key_exists changes its behavior? The answer is it won't, as long as you're using it as documented. And isset is documented to be used exactly so. Worst case functions are deprecated over a major release version or two. NIH syndrome is bad!
    – deceze
    Dec 25, 2009 at 7:52
  • I'm sorry deceze, but first of all hack is in italics in case you didn't noticed. =) Secondly, you mean that one shouldn't rely on array_key_exists() to check if a key exists in an array?! array_key_exists() was created exactly for that, I rather rely on it for this purpose than isset() and specially empty() whose official description is: "determine whether a variable is empty", doesn't mentions anything if it actually exists. Your comment and down-vote is one of the most ridiculous I've witnessed all month.
    – Alix Axel
    Dec 25, 2009 at 8:20
  • 3
    I'm saying isset and empty are no more or less reliable than array_key_exists and can do the exact same job. Your second, long-winded example can be written as $domain = isset($domain['host']) ? $domain['host'] : 'N/A'; with just core language features, no extra function calls or declarations necessary (note that I do not necessarily advocate use of the ternary operator though ;o)). For ordinary scalar variables you'll still need to use isset or empty, and you can use them for arrays the exact same way. "Reliability" is a bad reason for not doing so.
    – deceze
    Dec 25, 2009 at 8:28
  • 1
    You made your point, although I don't agree with most of the stuff you said. I think you got it way wrong on the 90%+ cases, for instance I use the value of "0" in hidden fields in forms all the time. Still I believe the solution I provided doesn't deserve the down-vote and may well be of some use to Pekka.
    – Alix Axel
    Dec 25, 2009 at 8:59
  • 2
    While @deceze has a point with the custom functions - I usually take the same stance - the value() approach looks interesting enough that I will be taking a look at it. I think the answer and the followup will enable everybody who stumbles upon it later to make up their own mind. +1.
    – Pekka
    Dec 25, 2009 at 15:27
4

Welcome to null coalescing operator (PHP >= 7.0.1):

$field = $_GET['field'] ?? null;

PHP says:

The null coalescing operator (??) has been added as syntactic sugar for the common case of needing to use a ternary in conjunction with isset(). It returns its first operand if it exists and is not NULL; otherwise it returns its second operand.

0
3

I'm here with you. But PHP designers has made a lot more worse mistakes than that. Short of defining a custom function for any value reading, there isn't any way around it.

4
  • 1
    isset() stuff. Making everything null by default would save a lot of troubles.
    – vava
    Dec 25, 2009 at 14:07
  • 2
    And what is this 'everything'? It would seem like a waste for PHP to have to imagine every conceivable variable name and set each to NULL just so a lazy developer can avoid typing 5 characters. May 19, 2010 at 17:42
  • 5
    @Byron, look, it is really simple, a lot of other languages do that, Ruby and Perl as few examples. VM knows if variable was used before or not, doesn't it? It always can return null instead of failing with or without error message. And this is not about lousy 5 characters, it's about writing params["width"] = params["width"] || 5 to set defaults instead of all that nonsense with isset() calls.
    – vava
    May 20, 2010 at 3:12
  • 3
    Sorry for resurrecting an old thread. Two of PHP's worst mistakes were register_globals and magic_quotes. The problems these foster make uninitialized variables look almost harmless by comparison.
    – staticsan
    Nov 21, 2010 at 22:40
3

I use these functions

function load(&$var) { return isset($var) ? $var : null; }
function POST($var) { return isset($_POST[$var]) ? $_POST[$var] : null; }

Examples

$y = load($x); // null, no notice

// this attitude is both readable and comfortable
if($login=POST("login") and $pass=POST("pass")) { // really =, not ==
  // executes only if both login and pass were in POST
  // stored in $login and $pass variables
  $authorized = $login=="root" && md5($pass)=="f65b2a087755c68586568531ad8288b4";
}
1
  • 2
    I use this too but remember that in some case, your variables will be initialized automatically: eg load($array['FOO']) would create a FOO key in $array.
    – Mat
    Aug 13, 2012 at 20:08
1

Make a function which returns false if not set, and, if specified, false if empty. If valid it returns the variable. You can add more options as seen in the code below:

<?php
function isset_globals($method, $name, $option = "") {
    if (isset($method[$name])) {    // Check if such a variable
        if ($option === "empty" && empty($method[$name])) { return false; } // Check if empty 
        if ($option === "stringLength" && strlen($method[$name])) { return strlen($method[$name]); }    // Check length of string -- used when checking length of textareas
        return ($method[$name]);
    } else { return false; }
}

if (!isset_globals("$_post", "input_name", "empty")) {
    echo "invalid";
} else {
    /* You are safe to access the variable without worrying about errors! */
    echo "you uploaded: " . $_POST["input_name"];
}
?>
0

Software does not magically run by the grace of god. If you are expecting something that is missing, you need to properly handle it.

If you ignore it, you are probably creating security holes in your applications. In static languages accessing a non-defined variable it is just not possible. It won't simply compile or crash your application if it's null.

Furthermore, it makes your application unmaintainable, and you are going to go mad when unexpected things happen. Language strictness is a must and PHP, by design, is wrong in so many aspects. It will make you a bad programmer if you are not aware.

2
  • I am well aware of the shortfalls of PHP. As I pointed out in the question, I am talking about the overhauling of older projects.
    – Pekka
    Dec 25, 2009 at 15:13
  • Agreed. Being a ling-time PHP developer it is quite difficult for me to venture into new languages like Java where you need to declare everything.
    – Dzhuneyt
    Sep 7, 2012 at 9:38
0

I'm not sure what your definition of readability is, but proper use of empty(), isset() and try/throw/catch blocks, is pretty important to the whole process.

If your E_NOTICE is coming from $_GET or $_POST, then they should be checked against empty() right along with all the other security checks that that data should have to pass.

If it's coming from external feeds or libraries, it should be wrapped in try/catch.

If it's coming from the database, $db_num_rows() or its equivalent should be checked.

If it's coming from internal variables, they should be properly initialized. Often, these types of notices come from assigning a new variable to the return of a function that returns FALSE on a failure. Those should be wrapped in a test that, in the event of a failure, can either assign the variable an acceptable default value that the code can handle, or throwing an exception that the code can handle.

These things make the code longer, add extra blocks, and add extra tests, but I disagree with you in that I think they most definitely add extra value.

-2

What about using the @ operator?

For example:

if(@$foo) { /* Do something */ }

You may say this is bad because you have no control of what happens "inside" $foo (if it was a function call that contains a PHP error for example), but if you only use this technique for variables, this is equivalent to:

if(isset($foo) && $foo) { /* ... */ }
3
  • if(isset($foo)) is enough actually. It will return TRUE if the expression evaluates to TRUE.
    – Dzhuneyt
    Sep 7, 2012 at 9:37
  • 2
    @ColorWP.com it will also return true if the expression evaluates to false.
    – Jon Hulka
    Nov 22, 2012 at 10:11
  • You should only use the @ parameter (to ignore the notice) on code that is not really under further development, or on one-time code or a quick-fix on existing projects, that you don't want to show anybody else. But it is a common workaround for a quick hack.
    – rubo77
    Jun 23, 2017 at 16:14

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