Edit report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=54547&edit=1
ID: 54547 Comment by: Jeff at bobmail dot info Reported by: peter dot ritt at gmx dot net Summary: wrong equality of string numbers Status: Verified 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: That didn't address my comment. Why wouldn't the internal implementation check to see if the strings are the same? When doing a comparison and the internal data type is a string, wouldn't that be faster and most correct? In all honesty I would prefer PHP's "loosely typed" system mimic JavaScript's in that any type can be put anywhere but the object still keeps its type information for situations just like this. Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-04-12 13:59:32] ni...@php.net @Jeff: You have to understand in PHP 1, 1.0 and "1.0" all are equivalent (in most situations). That's by design. E.g. GET and POST variables are always strings, even if you put numbers into them (as per the HTTP standard). PHP obviously wants those GET/POST variables to still be useable just like they were numbers, that's why "1" and 1 can be used interchangeably throughout PHP. In that context - in my eyes - this comparison also makes sense. Consider a very similar comparison: var_dump('0.1' == '0.10000000'); What would you expect to be the output - if you remember that in PHP numeric strings and actual numbers are interchangeable? Clearly it has to behave exactly as if you had written: var_dump(0.1 == 0.10000000); // => bool(true) In most cases this type of comparison is what you want and it usually works exactly as expected. What you see here in this issue is one of the edge cases (how often do you use large numbers in PHP?) where it does not work well. I hope you understand that it is not viable to remove a handy feature from PHP, just because it fails under certain edge case conditions. If you want to use a strict string comparison, just use ===. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-04-12 13:58:53] paj...@php.net @Jeff at bobmail dot info that's what === is for (real comparisons without casting). ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-04-12 13:51:22] jabakobob at gmail dot com The conversion to a number is necessary because programmers don't differentiate between strings and numbers in PHP. Consider the following code: if ($_GET["a"] == $_GET["b"]) echo "a is same as b!"; The result will be the same if the query string is ?a=1&b=1 or ?a=1&b=1.0 or ? a=01&b=1 because PHP is loosely typed. Internally $_GET["a"] and $_GET["b"] are both strings, but we can't do a string comparison. If you want a string comparison, use strcmp. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-04-12 13:31:42] Jeff at bobmail dot info I'm confused as to why there is even a conversation around "should we fix this". The data objects are strings. Sure, PHP is "loosely typed" but shouldn't it do the comparison you tell it to do first before attempting anything else? I agree with the previous suggestion: make it a real string comparison and drop the type casting. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-04-12 06:39:31] paj...@php.net @a at hotmail dot com This is not a support channel, if you need further support for the base ideas about the loosely type nature of PHP, please ask them on one the numerous channels. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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 https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=54547 -- Edit this bug report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=54547&edit=1