344

I have a codebase where developers decided to use AND and OR instead of && and ||.

I know that there is a difference in operators' precedence (&& goes before and), but with the given framework (PrestaShop to be precise) it is clearly not a reason.

Which version are you using? Is and more readable than &&? Or is there no difference?

8
  • 1
    Note that ~ is the bit-wise NOT operator and not the logical. ;-)
    – Gumbo
    May 10, 2010 at 14:26
  • 2
    Yes, i know. Bad habits :) . It is a little bit strange that in PHP there are 'and', 'or' and 'xor', but there is no 'not', isn't it?
    – ts.
    May 12, 2010 at 10:30
  • 1
    @ts: the correct answer here is the one provided by R. Bemrose stackoverflow.com/questions/2803321/and-vs-as-operator/… May 24, 2011 at 15:45
  • 4
    ! is the logical not operator May 30, 2011 at 8:15
  • 2
    @chiliNUT quite right. At the time it must have made sense. Looks like the lurking incorrect answer has been punished at this point :)
    – doublejosh
    Mar 28, 2014 at 19:34

10 Answers 10

730

If you use AND and OR, you'll eventually get tripped up by something like this:

$this_one = true;
$that = false;

$truthiness = $this_one and $that;

Want to guess what $truthiness equals?

If you said false... bzzzt, sorry, wrong!

$truthiness above has the value true. Why? = has a higher precedence than and. The addition of parentheses to show the implicit order makes this clearer:

($truthiness = $this_one) and $that

If you used && instead of and in the first code example, it would work as expected and be false.

As discussed in the comments below, this also works to get the correct value, as parentheses have higher precedence than =:

$truthiness = ($this_one and $that)
16
  • 164
    +1: this should be made loud and clear in PHP documentation, or PHP should change and give same precedence to these operators or DEPRECATE and or once for all. I saw too many people thinking they are exactly the same thing and the answers here are more testimonials. May 24, 2011 at 15:44
  • 12
    Actually, other languages (for example, Perl and Ruby) also have these variants with the same precedence distinction so it wouldn't be sensible to deviate from this standard (however puzzling it might be for beginners) by making precedence equal in PHP. Not to mention the backward compatibility of tons of PHP applications. Jan 25, 2012 at 8:27
  • 26
    People's inability to read the documentation for a language does not make the language's decisions wrong. As Mladen notes, Perl and Ruby also use these extra operators, and with the same precedences. It allows for constructs such as $foo and bar(), which are nice shortcuts for if statements. If unexpected behaviour (from bad documentation, or not reading it) were a reason not to use something we wouldn't be talking about using PHP at all.
    – Altreus
    Aug 30, 2012 at 11:49
  • 6
    I agree with Dmitriy - wrapping the boolean evaluation in parentheses helps to clarify the intent of the code. I think the operator and it's function as they now exist are valuable and consistent with other languages, it's the job of the programmer to understand the language.
    – jrz
    May 12, 2013 at 13:59
  • 3
    I used to avoid && and || because I wrongly thought they were legacy and because they did not read as "English" but they are almost always what I want.
    – zzapper
    Feb 25, 2014 at 13:29
48

Depending on how it's being used, it might be necessary and even handy. http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.logical.php

// "||" has a greater precedence than "or"

// The result of the expression (false || true) is assigned to $e
// Acts like: ($e = (false || true))
$e = false || true;

// The constant false is assigned to $f and then true is ignored
// Acts like: (($f = false) or true)
$f = false or true;

But in most cases it seems like more of a developer taste thing, like every occurrence of this that I've seen in CodeIgniter framework like @Sarfraz has mentioned.

4
  • 2
    It's worth noting that the "true" isn't ignored if that expression is part of a larger statement. Consider the case if ($f = false or true) $f = true; - the result would be that $f does become true in the end, because the expression evaluates as true overall. Mar 15, 2012 at 22:04
  • 1
    no, you simply overwrote the variable later. the expression still evaluated to false, then you overwrote it with true in the next line.
    – r3wt
    May 13, 2014 at 21:50
  • 3
    Actually, he was right. First, $f gets assigned false - but the condition evaluates to true, so then $f is overwritten. If the condition evaluated to false, $f would never been overwritten either way.
    – ahouse101
    Jun 29, 2014 at 23:58
  • It's ridiculous to suggest the developers should follow their own taste. Forget the nightmare of another developer trying to maintain the same code, the developer who wrote the code itself would be making semantic mistakes in any code written because s/he preferred and over &&, where and works as expected in only some situations and && works as expected in all situations.
    – ADTC
    Sep 7, 2018 at 19:49
16

Since and has lower precedence than = you can use it in condition assignment:

if ($var = true && false) // Compare true with false and assign to $var
if ($var = true and false) // Assign true to $var and compare $var to false
13

For safety, I always parenthesise my comparisons and space them out. That way, I don't have to rely on operator precedence:

if( 
    ((i==0) && (b==2)) 
    || 
    ((c==3) && !(f==5)) 
  )
6
  • 34
    Personally I think adding extra unnecessary parentheses makes it more confusing to read than having just what you need. For example, I think this is much easier to read: if (($i == 0 && $b == 2) || ($c == 3 && $f != 5))
    – rooby
    May 11, 2014 at 7:40
  • 4
    I think this is the prettiest piece of code I've looked at all day. Good job.
    – rm-vanda
    Dec 30, 2014 at 22:58
  • As PHP is an interpreted language it will run fast if you don't use unnecessary whitespaces or new lines on your code. If you do the same on a compiled language it only will take more time to compile but it will not take effect on runtime. I don't mean doing it once will mark a difference but on an entire application using php + javascript both wrote like the example... load times will be larger for sure. Explanation: Whitespaces and new lines are ignored, but to ignore them, they have to be checked. This happens at runtime on interpreted langs and when compiling on a compiled ones.
    – JoelBonetR
    Apr 6, 2018 at 19:12
  • 1
    @JoelBonetR if you're using php opcache or similar your concern about load times is irrelevant. I'd hope nobody is running a production php site without it...
    – PeloNZ
    Sep 18, 2018 at 1:38
  • @PeloNZ so you can write dirty because it will be cached anyway and the entire project will take only a second more to load when refresh, huh? To code clean is for yourself and your teammates, concerning about timings was only a point that most people ignore or simply didn't know.
    – JoelBonetR
    Sep 18, 2018 at 5:04
12

Precedence differs between && and and (&& has higher precedence than and), something that causes confusion when combined with a ternary operator. For instance,

$predA && $predB ? "foo" : "bar"

will return a string whereas

$predA and $predB ? "foo" : "bar"

will return a boolean.

3

Let me explain the difference between “and” - “&&” - "&".

"&&" and "and" both are logical AND operations and they do the same thing, but the operator precedence is different.

The precedence (priority) of an operator specifies how "tightly" it binds two expressions together. For example, in the expression 1 + 5 * 3, the answer is 16 and not 18 because the multiplication ("*") operator has a higher precedence than the addition ("+") operator.

Mixing them together in single operation, could give you unexpected results in some cases I recommend always using &&, but that's your choice.


On the other hand "&" is a bitwise AND operation. It's used for the evaluation and manipulation of specific bits within the integer value.

Example if you do (14 & 7) the result would be 6.

7   = 0111
14  = 1110
------------
    = 0110 == 6
2

Another nice example using if statements without = assignment operations.

if (true || true && false); // is the same as:
if (true || (true && false)); // TRUE

and

if (true || true AND false); // is the same as:
if ((true || true) && false); // FALSE

because AND has a lower precedence and thus || a higher precedence.

These are different in the cases of true, false, false and true, true, false. See https://ideone.com/lsqovs for en elaborate example.

1

which version are you using?

If the coding standards for the particular codebase I am writing code for specifies which operator should be used, I'll definitely use that. If not, and the code dictates which should be used (not often, can be easily worked around) then I'll use that. Otherwise, probably &&.

Is 'and' more readable than '&&'?

Is it more readable to you. The answer is yes and no depending on many factors including the code around the operator and indeed the person reading it!

|| there is ~ difference?

Yes. See logical operators for || and bitwise operators for ~.

0

I guess it's a matter of taste, although (mistakenly) mixing them up might cause some undesired behaviors:

true && false || false; // returns false

true and false || false; // returns true

Hence, using && and || is safer for they have the highest precedence. In what regards to readability, I'd say these operators are universal enough.

UPDATE: About the comments saying that both operations return false ... well, in fact the code above does not return anything, I'm sorry for the ambiguity. To clarify: the behavior in the second case depends on how the result of the operation is used. Observe how the precedence of operators comes into play here:

var_dump(true and false || false); // bool(false)

$a = true and false || false; var_dump($a); // bool(true)

The reason why $a === true is because the assignment operator has precedence over any logical operator, as already very well explained in other answers.

1
  • 17
    This isn't true, they all return false.
    – Jay
    Feb 22, 2013 at 0:26
0

Here's a little counter example:

$a = true;
$b = true;
$c = $a & $b;
var_dump(true === $c);

output:

bool(false)

I'd say this kind of typo is far more likely to cause insidious problems (in much the same way as = vs ==) and is far less likely to be noticed than adn/ro typos which will flag as syntax errors. I also find and/or is much easier to read. FWIW, most PHP frameworks that express a preference (most don't) specify and/or. I've also never run into a real, non-contrived case where it would have mattered.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.