Hodicska Gergely wrote:
> It outputs this: false bool(false) int(0)
Yes, this the right output.
And this output is absolutely correct. Your condition gives new values
to $a and $b because you use "=" and not "==". So you do this:
Maybe you never read this:
http://hu2.php.net/manual/en/language.operators.php#language.operators.precedence
The result is not so obvious. There sould some internal behavior which
cause this.
I don't see the problem. The behaviour of your code matches the
precendences in my opinion:
$a = 1 && $b = 0
PHP sees two expressions here:
$a = 1 && $b (because && has higher priority than =)
and
$b = 0;
So the condition resolves to "1 && 0" while $a is set to false and $b is
set to 0;
So where is the problem?
--
Bye, K <http://www.ailis.de/~k/> (FidoNet: 2:240/2188.18)
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