Why doesnt my function pass string data to variable? [duplicate]
Incrementing / Decrementing Operators
++
increment operator
--
decrement operator
Example Name Effect
---------------------------------------------------------------------
++$a Pre-increment Increments $a by one, then returns $a.
$a++ Post-increment Returns $a, then increments $a by one.
--$a Pre-decrement Decrements $a by one, then returns $a.
$a-- Post-decrement Returns $a, then decrements $a by one.
These can go before or after the variable.
If put before the variable, the increment/decrement operation is done to the variable first then the result is returned. If put after the variable, the variable is first returned, then the increment/decrement operation is done.
For example:
$apples = 10;
for ($i = 0; $i < 10; ++$i) {
echo 'I have ' . $apples-- . " apples. I just ate one.\n";
}
Live example
In the case above ++$i
is used, since it is faster. $i++
would have the same results.
Pre-increment is a little bit faster because it really increments the variable and after that 'returns' the result. Post-increment creates a special variable, copies there the value of the first variable and only after the first variable is used, replaces its value with second's.
However, you must use $apples--
, since first, you want to display the current number of apples, and then you want to subtract one from it.
You can also increment letters in PHP:
$i = "a";
while ($i < "c") {
echo $i++;
}
Once z
is reached aa
is next, and so on.
Note that character variables can be incremented but not decremented and even so only plain ASCII characters (a-z and A-Z) are supported.
Stack Overflow Posts:
- Understanding Incrementing
Bitwise Operator
What is a bit? A bit is a representation of 1 or 0. Basically OFF(0) and ON(1)
What is a byte? A byte is made up of 8 bits and the highest value of a byte is 255, which would mean every bit is set. We will look at why a byte's maximum value is 255.
-------------------------------------------
| 1 Byte ( 8 bits ) |
-------------------------------------------
|Place Value | 128| 64| 32| 16| 8| 4| 2| 1|
-------------------------------------------
This representation of 1 Byte
1 + 2 + 4 + 8 + 16 + 32 + 64 + 128 = 255 (1 Byte)
A few examples for better understanding
The "AND" operator: &
$a = 9;
$b = 10;
echo $a & $b;
This would output the number 8. Why? Well let's see using our table example.
-------------------------------------------
| 1 Byte ( 8 bits ) |
-------------------------------------------
|Place Value | 128| 64| 32| 16| 8| 4| 2| 1|
-------------------------------------------
| $a | 0| 0| 0| 0| 1| 0| 0| 1|
-------------------------------------------
| $b | 0| 0| 0| 0| 1| 0| 1| 0|
-------------------------------------------
| & | 0| 0| 0| 0| 1| 0| 0| 0|
-------------------------------------------
So you can see from the table the only bit they share together is the 8 bit.
Second example
$a = 36;
$b = 103;
echo $a & $b; // This would output the number 36.
$a = 00100100
$b = 01100111
The two shared bits are 32 and 4, which when added together return 36.
The "Or" operator: |
$a = 9;
$b = 10;
echo $a | $b;
This would output the number 11. Why?
-------------------------------------------
| 1 Byte ( 8 bits ) |
-------------------------------------------
|Place Value | 128| 64| 32| 16| 8| 4| 2| 1|
-------------------------------------------
| $a | 0| 0| 0| 0| 1| 0| 0| 1|
-------------------------------------------
| $b | 0| 0| 0| 0| 1| 0| 1| 0|
-------------------------------------------
| | | 0| 0| 0| 0| 1| 0| 1| 1|
-------------------------------------------
You will notice that we have 3 bits set, in the 8, 2, and 1 columns. Add those up: 8+2+1=11.
<=>
Spaceship Operator
Added in PHP 7
The spaceship operator <=>
is the latest comparison operator added in PHP 7. It is a non-associative binary operator with the same precedence as equality operators (==
, !=
, ===
, !==
). This operator allows for simpler three-way comparison between left-hand and right-hand operands.
The operator results in an integer expression of:
-
0
when both operands are equal - Less than
0
when the left-hand operand is less than the right-hand operand - Greater than
0
when the left-hand operand is greater than the right-hand operand
e.g.
1 <=> 1; // 0
1 <=> 2; // -1
2 <=> 1; // 1
A good practical application of using this operator would be in comparison type callbacks that are expected to return a zero, negative, or positive integer based on a three-way comparison between two values. The comparison function passed to usort
is one such example.
Before PHP 7 you would write...
$arr = [4,2,1,3];
usort($arr, function ($a, $b) {
if ($a < $b) {
return -1;
} elseif ($a > $b) {
return 1;
} else {
return 0;
}
});
Since PHP 7 you can write...
$arr = [4,2,1,3];
usort($arr, function ($a, $b) {
return $a <=> $b;
// return $b <=> $a; // for reversing order
});
_
Alias for gettext()
The underscore character '_' as in _()
is an alias to the gettext()
function.
Syntax | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
x == y |
Equality |
true if x and y have the same key/value pairs |
x != y |
Inequality |
true if x is not equal to y |
x === y |
Identity |
true if x and y have the same key/value pairsin the same order and of the same types |
x !== y |
Non-identity |
true if x is not identical to y |
x <=> y |
Spaceship | 0 if x is equal to y, greater than 0 if x > y, less than 0 if x < y |
++x |
Pre-increment | Increments x by one, then returns x |
x++ |
Post-increment | Returns x, then increments x by one |
--x |
Pre-decrement | Decrements x by one, then returns x |
x-- |
Post-decrement | Returns x, then decrements x by one |
x and y |
And |
true if both x and y are true . If x=6, y=3 then(x < 10 and y > 1) returns true
|
x && y |
And |
true if both x and y are true . If x=6, y=3 then(x < 10 && y > 1) returns true
|
x or y |
Or |
true if any of x or y are true . If x=6, y=3 then(x < 10 or y > 10) returns true
|
x || y |
Or |
true if any of x or y are true . If x=6, y=3 then(x < 3 || y > 1) returns true
|
a . b |
Concatenation | Concatenate two strings: "Hi" . "Ha" |