such functions are really many. Shall we split the efforts? Make a list
also for the translations to be consistent?

-- 
Maxim Maletsky
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


On Sun, 10 Nov 2002 02:30:18 +0100 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Yes its probably cause of that. But this should be now changed to bool.
> 
> --
> 
> M.CHAILLAN Nicolas
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> www.WorldAKT.com H�bergement de sites internets.
> 
> "Maxim Maletsky" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a �crit dans le message de news:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> I guess it is because before true and false used to be ones and zeros.
> So, ints were actually returned. Tell me i am wrong...
> 
> --
> Maxim Maletsky
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> 
> On Sun, 10 Nov 2002 02:12:26 +0100 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> > Yes it should be corrected. This is a bad proto information.
> >
> > --
> >
> > M.CHAILLAN Nicolas
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > www.WorldAKT.com H�bergement de sites internets.
> >
> > "Maxim Maletsky" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a �crit dans le message de news:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >
> > > Guys, I've been wondering about the returns specified for function
> > > protos.
> > >
> > > Many functions (as OCICommit() or copy() or even phpinfo() for instance)
> > > do an action and return you the result relevant to their success as the
> > > boolean type.  However, these functions are documented as:
> > >
> > > int OCICommit ( int connection)
> > > int copy ( string source, string dest)
> > >
> > > in other words, they say the return is an integer. That is a very
> > > confusing thing IMO.  Especially because functions like is_dir() or
> > > file_exists() show it right:
> > >
> > > bool is_dir ( string filename)
> > > bool file_exists ( string filename)
> > >
> > > true, one doing:
> > >
> > > if(OCICommit($conn))
> > > echo 'ok';
> > > else
> > > echo 'doh';
> > >
> > > will still get the desired result, but if one tries to compare it to
> > > zeros and ones will fail.. in fact, even a simple:
> > >
> > > if(phpinfo() === 1)
> > > echo "result is integer 1";
> > >
> > > will fail because even phpinfo() returns boolean, not integer... ( == 1
> > > will work though because of the runtime typecasting...)
> > >
> > > I cannot see the reason why so many functions should still claim to
> return
> > integers
> > > while they in fact return booleans. It is so confusing, IMO.
> > >
> > > Shouldn't we correct them? There are way more than only these two
> > > functions I used as examples.
> > >
> > > --
> > > Maxim Maletsky
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
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> >
> 
> 
> 
> 
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