ID:               19883
 Updated by:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reported By:      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Status:           Bogus
 Bug Type:         Strings related
 Operating System: Windows NT
 PHP Version:      4.2.0
 New Comment:

THIS IS NOT A BUG!
Read the docs about operator precedence
(http://www.php.net/manual/en/language.operators.php#language.operators.precedence).
To avoid problems like these use parentheses ():
echo 'c='.($a*2).' ok';


Previous Comments:
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[2002-10-13 12:03:06] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Yes, of course,
I was only thinking that the advantage of PHP over C
was that we can concatenate easily strings with
expressions and functions results when setting variable,
calling functions ...

this syntax allow to do :

something('a='.$a.' and f(a)*2 = '.f($a)*2.' ...');

instead of :
$str = 'a=';
$str .= $a;
$str .= ' and f(a)*2 = ';
$str .= f($a)*2;
$str .= ' ...';
something($str);

or :
$str = sprintf('a=%d and f(a)*2 = %d ...', $a, f($a)*2);
something($str);

I really think that if you allow this kind of concatenation
to avoid complex string composition, then the 'float'
problem is a bug, standard C does not allow dynamic
string concatenation but in C++ you can overload the '+'
operator and there is no confusion with the '.'

I know there is always a way to overcome the problem
in syntax, my report is only about something that
appear to me to be an error.

Julien.

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

[2002-10-13 11:38:29] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

In that case, simply use

$i = 153;
echo $i*2
echo 'km';

or printf()...

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

[2002-10-13 11:16:05] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

and when you want to concatenate with dynamic
calculated infos ?

$i = 153;
echo $i*2.'km';

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

[2002-10-13 09:47:57] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Why don't you just use '2km' instead of 2.'km' ?

Derick

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

[2002-10-13 09:46:06] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

and also :

$e = 0x7C.'km'; // is ok '124km'
$e = 124.'km'; // parse error

why do you process decimal integers in different way
than hexadecimal integers ? If it is only to detect
decimal float then you should take care to the fact that
'.' is not only a decimal separator but also a concatenation
operator !!!

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

The remainder of the comments for this report are too long. To view
the rest of the comments, please view the bug report online at
    http://bugs.php.net/19883

-- 
Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=19883&edit=1

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