I'm sending some data in an Ajax call. One of the values is a boolean set to FALSE. It is always evaluated as TRUE in the PHP script called by the Ajax. Any ideas?
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
data: {photo_id: photo_id,
vote: 1,
undo_vote: false}, // This is the important boolean!
url: "../../build/ajaxes/vote.php",
success: function(data){
console.log(data);
}
});
In vote.php, the script that is called in the above Ajax, I check the boolean value:
if ($_POST['undo_vote'] == true) {
Photo::undo_vote($_POST['photo_id']);
} else {
Photo::vote($_POST['photo_id'], $_POST['vote']);
}
But the $_POST['undo_vote'] == true
condition is ALWAYS met.
if ($_POST['undo_vote'] == 'true') {
? (I'd expect request parameters to be received as strings unless you pass a string of JSON and parse it server-side before testing the individual properties.)"false"
is a truthy value.