类型转换的判别

PHP 在变量定义中不需要(或不支持)明确的类型定义;变量类型是根据使用该变量的上下文所决定的。也就是说,如果把一个 string 值赋给变量 $var$var 就成了一个 string。如果又把一个int 赋给 $var,那它就成了一个int

PHP 的自动类型转换的一个例子是乘法运算符"*"。如果任何一个操作数是float, 则所有的操作数都被当成float,结果也是float。 否则操作数会被解释为int,结果也是int。 注意这并没有改变这些操作数本身的类型; 改变的仅是这些操作数如何被求值以及表达式本身的类型。

<?php
$foo 
"1";  // $foo 是字符串 (ASCII 49)
$foo *= 2;   // $foo 现在是一个整数 (2)
$foo $foo 1.3;  // $foo 现在是一个浮点数 (2.6)
$foo "10 Little Piggies"// $foo 是整数 (50)
$foo "10 Small Pigs";     // $foo 是整数 (50)
?>

如果上面两个例子看上去古怪的话,参见如何将 数字字符串转换为数值。

如果要强制将一个变量当作某种类型来求值,参见类型强制转换一节。如果要改变一个变量的类型,参见 settype()

如果想要测试本节中任何例子的话,可以用 var_dump() 函数。

Note:

自动转换为 数组 的行为目前没有定义。

此外,由于 PHP 支持使用和数组下标同样的语法访问字符串下标,以下例子在所有 PHP 版本中都有效:

<?php
$a    
'car'// $a is a string
$a[0] = 'b';   // $a is still a string
echo $a;       // bar
?>

请参阅存取和修改字符串中的字符一节以获取更多信息。

类型强制转换

PHP 中的类型强制转换和 C 中的非常像:在要转换的变量之前加上用括号括起来的目标类型。

<?php
$foo 
10;   // $foo is an integer
$bar = (boolean) $foo;   // $bar is a boolean
?>

允许的强制转换有:

  • (int), (integer) - 转换为整形 int
  • (bool), (boolean) - 转换为布尔类型 bool
  • (float), (double), (real) - 转换为浮点型 float
  • (string) - 转换为字符串 string
  • (array) - 转换为数组 array
  • (object) - 转换为对象 object
  • (unset) - 转换为 NULL

向前兼容 (binary) 转换和 b 前缀转换。注意 (binary) 转换和 (string) 基本相同,但是不应该依赖它。

(unset) 转换在 PHP 7.2.0 中已被废弃。请注意 (unset) 转换等于将值赋予 NULL。(unset) 转换已经在 PHP 8.0.0 中被移除。

注意在括号内允许有空格和制表符,所以下面两个例子功能相同:

<?php
$foo 
= (int) $bar;
$foo = ( int ) $bar;
?>

将字符串文字和变量转换为二进制字符串:

<?php
$binary 
= (binary)$string;
$binary b"binary string";
?>

Note:

可以将变量放置在双引号中的方式来代替将变量转换成字符串:

<?php
$foo 
10;            // $foo 是一个整数
$str "$foo";        // $str 是一个字符串
$fst = (string) $foo// $fst 也是一个字符串

// 输出 "they are the same"
if ($fst === $str) {
    echo 
"they are the same";
}
?>

有时在类型之间强制转换时确切地会发生什么可能不是很明显。更多信息见如下小节:

User Contributed Notes

Anonymous 05-Feb-2021 01:07
Cast operators have a very high precedence, for example (int)$a/$b is evaluated as ((int)$a)/$b, not as (int)($a/$b) [which would be like intdiv($a,$b) if both $a and $b are integers].
The only exceptions (as of PHP 8.0) are the exponentiation operator ** [i.e. (int)$a**$b is evaluated as (int)($a**$b) rather than ((int)$a)**$b] and the special access/invocation operators ->, ::, [] and () [i.e. in each of (int)$a->$b, (int)$a::$b, (int)$a[$b] and (int)$a($b), the cast is performed last on the result of the variable expression].
Dhairya Lakhera 25-Jul-2019 10:02
Value of uninitialized variable of different data types.

settype($a,'bool');
var_dump($a);         //boolean false

settype($b,'string');
var_dump($b);        //string '' (length=0)

settype($c,'array');
var_dump($c);        //array (size=0)  empty

settype($d,'int');
var_dump($d);       //int 0

settype($e,'float');
var_dump($e);      //float 0

settype($f,'object');
var_dump($f);     //object(stdClass)[1]
Anonymous 11-Mar-2019 05:16
"An example of PHP's automatic type conversion is the multiplication operator '*'. If either operand is a float, then both operands are evaluated as floats, and the result will be a float. Otherwise, the operands will be interpreted as integers, and the result will also be an integer. Note that this does not change the types of the operands themselves; the only change is in how the operands are evaluated and what the type of the expression itself is."

I understand what the doc is trying to say here, but this sentence is not correct as stated, other types can be coerced into floats.

e.g.

<?php
$a
= "1.5"; // $a is a string
$b = 100; // $b is an int
$c = $a * $b; // $c is a float, value is 150
// multiplication resulted in a float despite fact that neither operand was a float
berniev 15-Sep-2015 11:23
May be expected, but not stated ..
Casting to the existing (same) type has no effect.
$t = 'abc';          // string 'abc'
$u=(array) $t;   // array 0 => string 'abc'  <-- now an array
$v=(array) $u;  // array 0 => string 'abc'  <-- unchanged
davaakhuu at outlook dot com 03-Jun-2015 07:29
Type Juggling<br/>
   <?php $count = "2 cats"; ?>
   Type: <?php echo gettype($count); ?><br/>
   <?php $count += 3; ?>
   Type: <?php echo gettype($count); ?><br/>
   <?php $cats = "I have " . $count . "cats."; ?>
   Cats: <?php echo gettype($cats); ?><br/>
   <br/>
   Type Casting<br/>
   <?php settype($count, "integer"); ?>
   count: <?php echo gettype($count); ?><br/>

   <?php $count2 = (string)$count; ?>
   count: <?php echo gettype($count); ?><br/>
   count2: <?php echo gettype($count2); ?><br/>

   <?php $test1 = 3; ?>
   <?php $test2 = 3; ?>
   <?php settype($test1, "string"); ?>
   <?php (string)$test2; ?>
   test1: <?php echo gettype($test1); ?><br/>
   test2: <?php echo gettype($test2); ?><br/>
mbrowne83 (at GM) 27-Dec-2014 01:15
The code listed in some of the comments here for supposedly "casting" from one class to another using unserialize/serialize does not actually change the class of the existing object; it creates a new object. So it's not the same as a cast.
Eric Lavoie 02-Oct-2014 09:24
(array) null
array(null)

are not the same.

var_dump((array) null) =>
array (size=0)
  empty

var_dump(array (null)) =>
array (size=1)
  0 => null
kuzawinski dot marcin at NOSPAM dot gmail dot com 14-Jul-2014 09:40
You REALLY must be aware what you are doing, when you cast a lot  in your code. For example, you can accidentaly change FALSE to TRUE  (probably not in one line, like here):

if(TRUE === (boolean) (array) (int) FALSE) {
    kaboom();
}
fardelian 13-Apr-2013 03:23
Casting objects to arrays is a pain. Example:

<?php

class MyClass {

    private
$priv = 'priv_value';
    protected
$prot = 'prot_value';
    public
$pub = 'pub_value';
    public
$MyClasspriv = 'second_pub_value';

}

$test = new MyClass();
echo
'<pre>';
print_r((array) $test);

/*
Array
(
    [MyClasspriv] => priv_value
    [*prot] => prot_value
    [pub] => pub_value
    [MyClasspriv] => second_pub_value
)
 */

?>

Yes, that looks like an array with two keys with the same name and it looks like the protected field was prepended with an asterisk. But that's not true:

<?php

foreach ((array) $test as $key => $value) {
   
$len = strlen($key);
    echo
"{$key} ({$len}) => {$value}<br />";
    for (
$i = 0; $i < $len; ++$i) {
        echo
ord($key[$i]) . ' ';
    }
    echo
'<hr />';
}

/*
MyClasspriv (13) => priv_value
0 77 121 67 108 97 115 115 0 112 114 105 118
*prot (7) => prot_value
0 42 0 112 114 111 116
pub (3) => pub_value
112 117 98
MyClasspriv (11) => second_pub_value
77 121 67 108 97 115 115 112 114 105 118
 */

?>

The char codes show that the protected keys are prepended with '\0*\0' and private keys are prepended with '\0'.__CLASS__.'\0' so be careful when playing around with this.
ieee at REMOVE dot bk dot ru 17-Jun-2012 04:26
There are some shorter and faster (at least on my machine) ways to perform a type cast.
<?php
$string
='12345.678';
$float=+$string;
$integer=0|$string;
$boolean=!!$string;
?>
Anonymous 07-Feb-2012 06:31
namaroulis stated "I found it tricky to check if a posted value was an integer"; to test if a variable is a number or a numeric string (such as form input, which is always a string), you must use is_numeric():

<?php
$_POST
['a'] = "42";

is_numeric( $_POST['a'] ); // true
?>
hemi68 at hotmail dot com 06-Sep-2011 08:01
Cast a string to binary using PHP < 5.2.1

 $binary = unpack('c*', $string);
jphansen at uga dot edu 21-Apr-2011 10:53
Type casting from string to int and vice versa is probably the most common conversation. PHP does this very simply through the +. and .= operators, removing any explicit casting:

<?php
$x
= 1;
var_dump($x); // int(1)
$x .= 1;
var_dump($x); // string(2) "11"; also an empty string ("") would cast to string without changing $x

$x = "1";
var_dump($x);  // string(1) "1"
$x += 1;
var_dump($x); // int(2); also a zero value (0) would cast to int without changing $x
?>
Anonymous 11-Mar-2011 11:01
Checking for strings to be integers?
How about if a string is a float?

<?php

/* checks if a string is an integer with possible whitespace before and/or after, and also isolates the integer */
$isInt=preg_match('/^\s*([0-9]+)\s*$/', $myString, $myInt);

echo
'Is Integer? ',  ($isInt) ? 'Yes: '.$myInt[1] : 'No', "\n";

/* checks if a string is an integer with no whitespace before or after  */
$isInt=preg_match('/^[0-9]+$/', $myString);

echo
'Is Integer? ',  ($isInt) ? 'Yes' : 'No', "\n";

/* When checking for floats, we assume the possibility of no decimals needed.  If you MUST require decimals (forcing the user to type 7.0 for example) replace the sequence:
[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?
with
[0-9]+\.[0-9]+
*/

/* checks if a string is a float with possible whitespace before and/or after, and also isolates the number */
$isFloat=preg_match('/^\s*([0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?)\s*$/', $myString, $myNum);

echo
'Is Number? ',  ($isFloat) ? 'Yes: '.$myNum[1] : 'No', "\n";

/* checks if a string is a float with no whitespace before or after */
$isInt=preg_match('/^[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?$/', $myString);

echo
'Is Number? ',  ($isFloat) ? 'Yes' : 'No', "\n";

?>
namaroulis at gmail dot com 02-Mar-2011 01:47
I found it tricky to check if a posted value was an integer.

<?php

$_POST
['a'] = "42";

is_int( $_POST['a'] ); //false
is_int( intval( "anything" ) ); //always true
?>

A method I use for checking if a string represents an integer value.

<?php
function check_int( $str )
                {
                    return 
is_numeric( $str ) && intval( $str ) - $str == 0;
                }
?>
rmirabelle 17-Oct-2010 10:18
The object casting methods presented here do not take into account the class hierarchy of the class you're trying to cast your object into.

/**
     * Convert an object to a specific class.
     * @param object $object
     * @param string $class_name The class to cast the object to
     * @return object
     */
    public static function cast($object, $class_name) {
        if($object === false) return false;
        if(class_exists($class_name)) {
            $ser_object     = serialize($object);
            $obj_name_len     = strlen(get_class($object));
            $start             = $obj_name_len + strlen($obj_name_len) + 6;
            $new_object      = 'O:' . strlen($class_name) . ':"' . $class_name . '":';
            $new_object     .= substr($ser_object, $start);
            $new_object     = unserialize($new_object);
            /**
             * The new object is of the correct type but
             * is not fully initialized throughout its graph.
             * To get the full object graph (including parent
             * class data, we need to create a new instance of
             * the specified class and then assign the new
             * properties to it.
             */
            $graph = new $class_name;
            foreach($new_object as $prop => $val) {
                $graph->$prop = $val;
            }
            return $graph;
        } else {
            throw new CoreException(false, "could not find class $class_name for casting in DB::cast");
            return false;
        }
    }
martinscotta at gmail dot com 21-Sep-2010 08:44
in response to bhsmither at gmail.com

It raises a warning because of the bad enquoted variable

<?php

error_reporting
( E_ALL | E_STRICT );

$foo['ten'] = 10;        // $foo['ten'] is an array holding an integer at key "ten"
$str = "{$foo['ten']}"// works "10"
$str = "$foo[ten]";      // DO NOT work!
bhsmither at gmail.com 19-Mar-2010 03:41
<?php
$foo
['ten'] = 10;            // $foo['ten'] is an array holding an integer at key "ten"
$str = "$foo['ten']";        // throws T_ENCAPSED_AND_WHITESPACE error
$str = "$foo[ten]";          // works because constants are skipped in quotes
$fst = (string) $foo['ten']; // works with clear intention
?>
edgar dot klerks at gmail dot com 17-Mar-2009 08:04
It seems (unset) is pretty useless. But for people who like to make their code really compact (and probably unreadable). You can use it to use an variable and unset it on the same line:

Without cast:

<?php

$hello
= 'Hello world';
print
$hello;
unset(
$hello);

?>

With the unset cast:

<?php

$hello
= 'Hello world';
$hello = (unset) print $hello;

?>

Hoorah, we lost another line!
kajsunansis at that gmail 03-Dec-2008 11:18
json_decode users consider this, when casting stdClass to array:
<?php
$obj
= new stdClass();
$obj->{"2"} = "id";
$arr = (array) $obj;
$result = isset($arr["2"]) || array_key_exists(2, $arr); // false
?>
..though casting is at least 2x faster than foreach.
Jeffrey 09-Nov-2008 11:34
IMAGINATION REQUIRED...

We can be a witness to PHP's 'type-jugglin' in real-time with a simple implementation of a MemoryMap. For the sake our purposes, pretend that this is an empty MemoryMap.
+-------+------+------+-------+
| index | $var | type | value |
+-------+------+------+-------+
|     1 |  --- | NULL |  null |
|     2 |  --- | NULL |  null |
|     3 |  --- | NULL |  null |
|     4 |  --- | NULL |  null |
+-------+------+------+-------+

<?php
# create some variables...
$a = 10;
$b = "Hello";
$c = array(55.45, 98.65);
# Now look at map...
?>
+-------+-------+---------+--------+
| index |  $var |    type |  value |
+-------+-------+---------+--------+
|     1 |    $a | INTEGER |     10 |
|     2 |    $b |  STRING |  Hello |
|     3 | $c[0] |   FLOAT |  55.45 |
|     4 | $c[1] |   FLOAT |  98.65 |
+-------+-------+---------+--------+
<?php
# Now, change the variable types...
$a = "Bye";
$b = 2;
$c[0] = "Buy";
$c[1] = "Now!";
#Look at map...
?>
+-------+-------+---------+--------+
| index |  $var |    type |  value |
+-------+-------+---------+--------+
|     1 |    $a |  STRING |    Bye | <- used to be INTEGER
|     2 |    $b | INTEGER |      2 | <- used to be STRING
|     3 | $c[0] |  STRING |    Buy | <- used to be FLOAT
|     4 | $c[1] |  STRING |  Right | <- used to be FLOAT
+-------+-------+---------+--------+
hek at theeks dot net 17-Oct-2008 09:24
It would be useful to know the precedence (for lack of a better word) for type juggling.  This entry currently explains that "if either operand is a float, then both operands are evaluated as floats, and the result will be a float" but could (and I think should) provide a hierarchy that indicates, for instance, "between an int and a boolean, int wins; between a float and an int, float wins; between a string and a float, string wins" and so on (and don't count on my example accurately capturing the true hierarchy, as I haven't actually done the tests to figure it out).  Thanks!
wbcarts at juno dot com 07-Oct-2008 06:05
WHERE'S THE BEEF?

Looks like type-casting user-defined objects is a real pain, and ya gotta be nuttin' less than a brain jus ta cypher-it. But since PHP supports OOP, you can add the capabilities right now. Start with any simple class.
<?php
class Point {
  protected
$x, $y;

  public function
__construct($xVal = 0, $yVal = 0) {
   
$this->x = $xVal;
   
$this->y = $yVal;
  }
  public function
getX() { return $this->x; }
  public function
getY() { return $this->y; }
}

$p = new Point(25, 35);
echo
$p->getX();      // 25
echo $p->getY();      // 35
?>
Ok, now we need extra powers. PHP gives us several options:
  A. We can tag on extra properties on-the-fly using everyday PHP syntax...
    $p->z = 45; // here, $p is still an object of type [Point] but gains no capability, and it's on a per-instance basis, blah.
  B. We can try type-casting it to a different type to access more functions...
    $p = (SuperDuperPoint) $p; // if this is even allowed, I doubt it. But even if PHP lets this slide, the small amount of data Point holds would probably not be enough for the extra functions to work anyway. And we still need the class def + all extra data. We should have just instantiated a [SuperDuperPoint] object to begin with... and just like above, this only works on a per-instance basis.
  C. Do it the right way using OOP - and just extend the Point class already.
<?php
class Point3D extends Point {
  protected
$z;                                // add extra properties...

 
public function __construct($xVal = 0, $yVal = 0, $zVal = 0) {
   
parent::__construct($xVal, $yVal);
   
$this->z = $zVal;
  }
  public function
getZ() { return $this->z; }  // add extra functions...
}

$p3d = new Point3D(25, 35, 45);  // more data, more functions, more everything...
echo $p3d->getX();               // 25
echo $p3d->getY();               // 35
echo $p3d->getZ();               // 45
?>
Once the new class definition is written, you can make as many Point3D objects as you want. Each of them will have more data and functions already built-in. This is much better than trying to beef-up any "single lesser object" on-the-fly, and it's way easier to do.
lucazd at gmail dot com 23-Sep-2008 09:20
@alexgr (20-Jun-2008)

Correct me if I'm wrong, but that is not a cast, it might be useful sometimes, but the IDE will not reflect what's really happening:

<?php
class MyObject {
   
/**
     * @param MyObject $object
     * @return MyObject
     */
   
static public function cast(MyObject $object) {
        return
$object;
    }
   
/** Does nothing */
   
function f() {}
}

class
X extends MyObject {
   
/** Throws exception */
   
function f() { throw new exception(); }
}

$x = MyObject::cast(new X);
$x->f(); // Your IDE tells 'f() Does nothing'
?>

However, when you run the script, you will get an exception.
nullhilty at gmail dot com 09-Sep-2008 11:34
Just a little experiment on the (unset) type cast:

<?php
$var
= 1;
$var_unset = (unset) $var;
$var_ref_unset &= (unset) $var;
var_dump($var);
var_dump($var_unset);
var_dump($var_ref_unset);
?>

output:
int(1)
NULL
int(0)
alexgr at gmail dot com 20-Jun-2008 03:43
For a Cast to a User Defined Object you can define a cast method:

class MyObject {
    /**
     * @param MyObject $object
     * @return MyObject
     */
    static public function cast(MyObject $object) {
        return $object;
    }
}

In your php page code you can:
$myObject = MyObject::cast($_SESSION["myObject"]);

Then, PHP will validate the value and your IDE will help you.
miracle at 1oo-percent dot de 20-Feb-2006 05:26
If you want to convert a string automatically to float or integer (e.g. "0.234" to float and "123" to int), simply add 0 to the string - PHP will do the rest.

e.g.

$val = 0 + "1.234";
(type of $val is float now)

$val = 0 + "123";
(type of $val is integer now)
22-Jun-2005 05:47
If you have a boolean, performing increments on it won't do anything despite it being 1.  This is a case where you have to use a cast.

<html>
<body> <!-- don't want w3.org to get mad... -->
<?php
$bar
= TRUE;
?>
I have <?=$bar?> bar.
<?php
$bar
++;
?>
I now have <?=$bar?> bar.
<?php
$bar
= (int) $bar;
$bar++;
?>
I finally have <?=$bar?> bar.
</body>
</html>

That will print

I have 1 bar.
I now have 1 bar.
I finally have 2 bar.
toma at smartsemantics dot com 09-Mar-2005 06:24
In my much of my coding I have found it necessary to type-cast between objects of different class types.

More specifically, I often want to take information from a database, convert it into the class it was before it was inserted, then have the ability to call its class functions as well.

The following code is much shorter than some of the previous examples and seems to suit my purposes.  It also makes use of some regular expression matching rather than string position, replacing, etc.  It takes an object ($obj) of any type and casts it to an new type ($class_type).  Note that the new class type must exist:

function ClassTypeCast(&$obj,$class_type){
    if(class_exists($class_type,true)){
        $obj = unserialize(preg_replace"/^O:[0-9]+:\"[^\"]+\":/i",
          "O:".strlen($class_type).":\"".$class_type."\":", serialize($obj)));
    }
}
Raja 10-Feb-2005 03:05
Uneven division of an integer variable by another integer variable will result in a float by automatic conversion -- you do not have to cast the variables to floats in order to avoid integer truncation (as you would in C, for example):

$dividend = 2;
$divisor = 3;
$quotient = $dividend/$divisor;
print $quotient; // 0.66666666666667
tom5025_ at hotmail dot com 24-Aug-2004 01:27
function strhex($string)
{
   $hex="";
   for ($i=0;$i<strlen($string);$i++)
       $hex.=dechex(ord($string[$i]));
   return $hex;
}
function hexstr($hex)
{
   $string="";
   for ($i=0;$i<strlen($hex)-1;$i+=2)
       $string.=chr(hexdec($hex[$i].$hex[$i+1]));
   return $string;
}

to convert hex to str and vice versa
dimo dot vanchev at bianor dot com 10-Mar-2004 07:02
For some reason the code-fix posted by philip_snyder at hotmail dot com [27-Feb-2004 02:08]
didn't work for me neither with long_class_names nor with short_class_names. I'm using PHP v4.3.5 for Linux.
Anyway here's what I wrote to solve the long_named_classes problem:

<?php
function typecast($old_object, $new_classname) {
    if(
class_exists($new_classname)) {
       
$old_serialized_object = serialize($old_object);
       
$old_object_name_length = strlen(get_class($old_object));
       
$subtring_offset = $old_object_name_length + strlen($old_object_name_length) + 6;
       
$new_serialized_object  = 'O:' . strlen($new_classname) . ':"' . $new_classname . '":';
       
$new_serialized_object .= substr($old_serialized_object, $subtring_offset);
        return
unserialize($new_serialized_object);
     } else {
         return
false;
     }
}
?>
philip_snyder at hotmail dot com 27-Feb-2004 07:08
Re: the typecasting between classes post below... fantastic, but slightly flawed. Any class name longer than 9 characters becomes a problem... SO here's a simple fix:

function typecast($old_object, $new_classname) {
  if(class_exists($new_classname)) {
    // Example serialized object segment
    // O:5:"field":9:{s:5:...   <--- Class: Field
    $old_serialized_prefix  = "O:".strlen(get_class($old_object));
    $old_serialized_prefix .= ":\"".get_class($old_object)."\":";

    $old_serialized_object = serialize($old_object);
    $new_serialized_object = 'O:'.strlen($new_classname).':"'.$new_classname . '":';
    $new_serialized_object .= substr($old_serialized_object,strlen($old_serialized_prefix));
   return unserialize($new_serialized_object);
  }
  else
   return false;
}

Thanks for the previous code. Set me in the right direction to solving my typecasting problem. ;)
post_at_henribeige_dot_de 03-May-2003 09:37
If you want to do not only typecasting between basic data types but between classes, try this function. It converts any class into another. All variables that equal name in both classes will be copied.

function typecast($old_object, $new_classname) {
  if(class_exists($new_classname)) {
    $old_serialized_object = serialize($old_object);
    $new_serialized_object = 'O:' . strlen($new_classname) . ':"' . $new_classname . '":' .
                             substr($old_serialized_object, $old_serialized_object[2] + 7);
    return unserialize($new_serialized_object);
  }
  else
    return false;
}

Example:

class A {
  var $secret;
  function A($secret) {$this->secret = $secret;}
  function output() {echo("Secret class A: " . $this->secret);}
}

class B extends A {
  var $secret;
  function output() {echo("Secret class B: " . strrev($this->secret));}
}

$a = new A("Paranoia");
$b = typecast($a, "B");

$a->output();
$b->output();
echo("Classname \$a: " . get_class($a) . "Classname \$b: " . get_class($b));

Output of the example code above:

Secret class A: Paranoia
Secret class B: aionaraP
Classname $a: a
Classname $b: b
yury at krasu dot ru 27-Nov-2002 01:24
incremental operator ("++") doesn't make type conversion from boolean to int, and if an variable is boolean and equals TRUE than after ++ operation it remains as TRUE, so:

$a = TRUE;
echo ($a++).$a;  // prints "11"
28-Aug-2002 10:26
Printing or echoing a FALSE boolean value or a NULL value results in an empty string:
(string)TRUE //returns "1"
(string)FALSE //returns ""
echo TRUE; //prints "1"
echo FALSE; //prints nothing!