122

Consider this JavaScript statement:

isTouch = document.createTouch !== undefined

I would like to know if we have a similar statement in PHP, not being isset(), but literally checking for an undefined value. Something like:

$isTouch != ""

Is there something similar as the above in PHP?

4

8 Answers 8

232

You can use -

$isTouch = isset($variable);

It will return true if the $variable is defined. If the variable is not defined it will return false.

Note: It returns TRUE if the variable exists and has a value other than NULL, FALSE otherwise.

If you want to check for false, 0, etc., you can then use empty() -

$isTouch = empty($variable);

empty() works for -

  • "" (an empty string)
  • 0 (0 as an integer)
  • 0.0 (0 as a float)
  • "0" (0 as a string)
  • NULL
  • FALSE
  • array() (an empty array)
  • $var; (a variable declared, but without a value)
8
  • 2
    isset() always returns bool.
    – VeeeneX
    May 12, 2015 at 12:58
  • 2
    No. It return true or false. So no need of that casting. May 12, 2015 at 12:59
  • 1
    you could also do this by using the empty() which would return false if it is an empty string. isset() will return true if its an empty string, also empty does a isset check internally.
    – mic
    May 12, 2015 at 13:01
  • 1
    you could also do this: $isTouch = (bool) $variable; which will do the same as isset() and is maybe a little better since it will work like empty().
    – mic
    May 12, 2015 at 13:02
  • 2
    I would argue that !isset(...) does NOT check whether a value is undefined. It checks if it is either undefined or null. I think it's important to note that things can be defined as null.
    – scorgn
    Feb 18, 2021 at 3:21
25

The isset() function does not check if a variable is defined.

It seems you've specifically stated that you're not looking for isset() in the question. I don't know why there are so many answers stating that isset() is the way to go, or why the accepted answer states that as well.

It's important to realize in programming that null is something. I don't know why it was decided that isset() would return false if the value is null.

To check if a variable is undefined you will have to check if the variable is in the list of defined variables, using get_defined_vars(). There is no equivalent to JavaScript's undefined (which is what was shown in the question, no jQuery being used there).

In the following example it will work the same way as JavaScript's undefined check.

$isset = isset($variable);
var_dump($isset); // false

But in this example, it won't work like JavaScript's undefined check.

$variable = null;
$isset = isset($variable);
var_dump($isset); // false

$variable is being defined as null, but the isset() call still fails.

So how do you actually check if a variable is defined? You check the defined variables.

Using get_defined_vars() will return an associative array with keys as variable names and values as the variable values. We still can't use isset(get_defined_vars()['variable']) here because the key could exist and the value still be null, so we have to use array_key_exists('variable', get_defined_vars()).

$variable = null;
$isset = array_key_exists('variable', get_defined_vars());
var_dump($isset); // true


$isset = array_key_exists('otherVariable', get_defined_vars());
var_dump($isset); // false

However, if you're finding that in your code you have to check for whether a variable has been defined or not, then you're likely doing something wrong. This is my personal belief as to why the core PHP developers left isset() to return false when something is null.

4
  • 10
    This, is the right answer! As for checking if a variable is defined, it's sometimes useful when working on a shi*y code with global vars all over the place. And why did the PHP folks decide to have isset() return false if the variable is defined and contains null... that's another mystery on Earth!
    – Déjà vu
    Apr 6, 2021 at 8:15
  • Thanks, this marks the end of my boggling at isset()'s curious blind-spot for null. As for the "doing something wrong" rationale, after brief consideration I can't point to a non-sketchy scenario for needing to know if a null variable exists, but for an array member there are most certainly cases of a meaningful null, e.g. when using prepared statements with PDO.
    – Headbank
    Mar 22, 2022 at 15:20
  • 1
    This is only right answer on this page. Learned the hard way.
    – sandman
    Apr 22, 2022 at 21:19
  • Nice explanation. isset may be working like so for compatibility reasons (it exists since php 4).
    – funder7
    Aug 3, 2022 at 22:32
24

Another way is simply:

if($test){
    echo "Yes 1";
}
if(!is_null($test)){
    echo "Yes 2";
}

$test = "hello";

if($test){
    echo "Yes 3";
}

Will return:

"Yes 3"

The best way is to use isset(). Otherwise you can have an error like "undefined $test".

You can do it like this:

if(isset($test) && ($test!==null))

You'll not have any error, because the first condition isn't accepted.

5
  • If we use $test!==null without brackets, then what will happened? Will it give error?
    – G_real
    Feb 20, 2019 at 14:38
  • No, it's ok too.
    – TiDJ
    Feb 21, 2019 at 15:12
  • Case 1 and 2 will throw a warning. This is not a proper way to check if the value is undefined.
    – scorgn
    Feb 18, 2021 at 3:24
  • isset() would return false if the value is null
    – Alex78191
    Mar 24, 2022 at 6:31
  • "The best way is to use isset(). Otherwise you can have an error like "undefined $test"." OP is asking exactly how to check when a variable is undefined! Or when a piece of code will return the warning that you mentioned: probably he wants to intercept such case!
    – funder7
    Aug 3, 2022 at 22:38
10

To check if a variable is set you need to use the isset function.

$lorem = 'potato';

if(isset($lorem)){
    echo 'isset true' . '<br />';
}else{
    echo 'isset false' . '<br />';
}

if(isset($ipsum)){
    echo 'isset true' . '<br />';
}else{
    echo 'isset false' . '<br />';
}

This code will print:

isset true
isset false

Read more in isset.

7

You can use the ternary operator to check whether the value is set by POST/GET or not. Something like this:

$value1 = $_POST['value1'] = isset($_POST['value1']) ? $_POST['value1'] : '';
$value2 = $_POST['value2'] = isset($_POST['value2']) ? $_POST['value2'] : '';
$value3 = $_POST['value3'] = isset($_POST['value3']) ? $_POST['value3'] : '';
$value4 = $_POST['value4'] = isset($_POST['value4']) ? $_POST['value4'] : '';
2
  • 1
    PHP 7.0 introduced the Null coalescing operator which is designed for things like this. The code is then $value1 = $_POST["value1"] ?? "fallback".
    – miile7
    Aug 30, 2021 at 10:49
  • Nice catch @miile7!
    – funder7
    Aug 3, 2022 at 22:40
5

You can use the PHP isset() function to test whether a variable is set or not. The isset() will return FALSE if testing a variable that has been set to NULL. Example:

<?php
    $var1 = '';
    if(isset($var1)){
        echo 'This line is printed, because the $var1 is set.';
    }
?>

This code will output "This line is printed, because the $var1 is set."

read more in https://stackhowto.com/how-to-check-if-a-variable-is-undefined-in-php/

1
  • But null is a value after all, and $var1 = null is something I could use in an if. So no cigar. Aug 6, 2021 at 21:11
4

JavaScript's 'strict not equal' operator (!==) on comparison with undefined does not result in false on null values.

var createTouch = null;
isTouch = createTouch !== undefined  // true

To achieve an equivalent behaviour in PHP, you can check whether the variable name exists in the keys of the result of get_defined_vars().

// just to simplify output format
const BR = '<br>' . PHP_EOL;

// set a global variable to test independence in local scope
$test = 1;

// test in local scope (what is working in global scope as well)
function test()
{
  // is global variable found?
  echo '$test ' . ( array_key_exists('test', get_defined_vars())
                    ? 'exists.' : 'does not exist.' ) . BR;
  // $test does not exist.

  // is local variable found?
  $test = null;
  echo '$test ' . ( array_key_exists('test', get_defined_vars())
                    ? 'exists.' : 'does not exist.' ) . BR;
  // $test exists.

  // try same non-null variable value as globally defined as well
  $test = 1;
  echo '$test ' . ( array_key_exists('test', get_defined_vars())
                    ? 'exists.' : 'does not exist.' ) . BR;
  // $test exists.

  // repeat test after variable is unset
  unset($test);
  echo '$test ' . ( array_key_exists('test', get_defined_vars())
                    ? 'exists.' : 'does not exist.') . BR;
  // $test does not exist.
}

test();

In most cases, isset($variable) is appropriate. That is aquivalent to array_key_exists('variable', get_defined_vars()) && null !== $variable. If you just use null !== $variable without prechecking for existence, you will mess up your logs with warnings because that is an attempt to read the value of an undefined variable.

However, you can apply an undefined variable to a reference without any warning:

// write our own isset() function
function my_isset(&$var)
{
  // here $var is defined
  // and initialized to null if the given argument was not defined
  return null !== $var;
}

// passing an undefined variable by reference does not log any warning
$is_set = my_isset($undefined_variable);   // $is_set is false
2
  • I'm not sure what the my_isset function would accomplish. The only thing it will determine is if a variable is set to null without throwing an error, not if the variable is defined. $string = 'string'; $is_set = my_isset($string);In this case $is_set would be false, even though it is set to a string.
    – scorgn
    Feb 18, 2021 at 3:29
  • @scorgn There was a typo. After saying 'If you just use null !== $variable' of course it should not be === in the following function. Just edited. Jun 13, 2021 at 16:16
2

The easiest way to check if a variable or array index exists (is defined) and is not null and is not empty and is not false:

#1

if($variable ?? false) 
    echo '$variable is defined';
else 
    echo '$variable is not defined';

// Result: $variable is not defined

#2

$variable = null;

if($variable ?? false) 
    echo '$variable is not null';
else 
    echo '$variable is null';

// Result: $variable is null

#3

$variable = false;

if($variable ?? false) 
    echo '$variable is not false';
else 
    echo '$variable is false';

// Result: $variable is false

#4

$variable = '';

if($variable ?? false) 
    echo '$variable is not empty';
else 
    echo '$variable is empty';

// Result: $variable is empty
1
  • 1
    I'd say this solution is the easiest, and probably fine in most cases. It may not be suitable for situations where you need to distinguish between undefined / null / false / true values.
    – funder7
    Aug 3, 2022 at 22:46

Your Answer

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

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