Edit report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=54547&edit=1

 ID:                 54547
 Updated by:         ses...@php.net
 Reported by:        peter dot ritt at gmx dot net
 Summary:            wrong equality of string numbers
 Status:             Not a bug
 Type:               Bug
 Package:            Unknown/Other Function
 Operating System:   linux
 PHP Version:        5.3.6
 Assigned To:        dmitry
 Block user comment: N
 Private report:     N

 New Comment:

This behaviour is for sure a bug. The == vs. === argument does not apply here.

PHP should not perform the type conversion for the comparison if the result of 
the 
type conversion does not fit into the actual type converted to.


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-04-13 10:15:52] yohg...@php.net

Just a comment for users who would like to use large numbers.

There are bcmath and gmp modules for large number arithmetic.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-04-13 07:08:00] paj...@php.net

ok, enough arguing. There is no bug here.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-04-13 03:13:57] four dot zero dot one dot unauthorized at gmail dot com

This behavior is documented here:
http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php
"If you compare a number with a string or the comparison involves numerical 
strings, then each string is converted to a number and the comparison performed 
numerically. These rules also apply to the switch statement. The type 
conversion does not take place when the comparison is === or !== as this 
involves comparing the type as well as the value. "

Shouldn't this feature of converting numerical strings to numbers during loose 
comparison operations between two strings be dropped?  If a developer wanted to 
compare values given during POST or GET processing AS numbers, they should cast 
the inputs to (int) or (float) first.  There really should be a fundamental 
shift away from catering to developer laziness, and force developers to pay 
more attention to variable and input handling on their own.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-04-13 01:10:44] the dot matt dot kantor at gmail dot com

@hholzgra:  Your only-coerce-on-failure proposal would not solve this issue.

Assuming that by "fail" you mean "the comparison evaluates to false", the 
strings would end up being coerced anyway (since they are indeed different), 
they'd become identical floats, and things would be the same as they are now.

If I misunderstood what you meant by "fail", then we'd lose "1" == "1.0", which 
I don't think is something that can (or should) happen.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-04-12 22:45:28] erowid at inbox dot lv

I want to marry it, lather this thread up, and have my way with it. I want to 
have little threads everywhere that are as funny as this xD

------------------------------------------------------------------------


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the rest of the comments, please view the bug report online at

    https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=54547


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