Potentially this could be cleaner if I knew how the array was constructed, but, having the assumption that you can have both empty strings, or nulls in the array, and you want to account for values of 0 --> here's what I'd do:
if (is_null($array[$key]) || (string)$array[$key] == '')
Here's a little bit of test code showing it in action with an array that has both 0, null, an empty string, and non-zero integers...
$array = array(0,1,null,2,'');
print_r($array);
foreach ($array as $key => $val) {
if (is_null($array[$key]) || (string)$array[$key] == '') {
echo $key.", true\n";
}
}
As for using isset() -- an empty string is consider to be set. Which may be what you're running into (aside from 0 being considered empty) Compare with this usage:
$foo = array(0,1,null,2,'');
print_r($foo);
foreach ($foo as $key => $val) {
if (isset($foo[$key])) {
echo $key.", true\n";
}
}
foreach($array as $key => $value) { if(is_null($array[$value])) { echo 'NULL'; } }
but it's not working. What am I doing wrong?