Edit report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=55464&edit=1

 ID:                 55464
 Updated by:         cataphr...@php.net
 Reported by:        zandor_zz at yahoo dot it
 Summary:            differ is_float() from is_double()
-Status:             Open
+Status:             Bogus
 Type:               Feature/Change Request
 Package:            Variables related
 Operating System:   any
 PHP Version:        Irrelevant
 Block user comment: N
 Private report:     N

 New Comment:

There is only one floating point type in PHP -- it is named float, with 
"double" (and "real") as an alias and the underlying representation is a C 
double. Both is_float and is_double (and also is_real) test for this type. So 
the proposal makes no sense. As such, I'm closing this as bogus.

What I think you actually wanted to suggest is introducing a new type with 
single precision. This would be a rather big change with no compelling 
advantages (the double can represent all the values the float can) and possible 
BC breaks. In any case, such a change would require extended discussion; see 
https://wiki.php.net/rfc


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2011-08-19 20:02:14] zandor_zz at yahoo dot it

Description:
------------
It would be nice to differ the behavior of is_float() from is_double(). This 
situation is not consistent cause float and double do differ for different 
byte size.
I have created a PHP class to handle advanced read/write operations on files 
and I 
crashed onto this ambiguous situation. Thus I wrote myself a workaround to 
solve 
this ambiguous situation. Then I suggest that it would be nice to rely on this 
feature in the standard PHP library.

Test script:
---------------
It is known from PHP standard documentation that is_double() is an alias of 
is_float().



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



-- 
Edit this bug report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=55464&edit=1

Reply via email to