On Mon, 2007-04-16 at 18:16 +0100, Stut wrote:
> Jim Lucas wrote:
> > Stut wrote:
> >> tedd wrote:
> >>> At 4:08 PM +0100 4/16/07, Stut wrote:
> >>>> Jim Lucas wrote:
> >>>>> Richard Kurth wrote:
> >>>>>> What do you do when isset does not work? If I send data in a
> >>>>>> $_REQUEST['var'] like if (isset($_REQUEST['var'])) {
> >>>>>> }
> >>>>>> Put var has no data it still says it is set. Because
> >>>>>> $_REQUEST['var'] = ""
> >>>>>> and isset thinks "" is set
> >>>>>>
> >>>>> I use this combination a lot:
> >>>>>
> >>>>> if ( isset($_GET['something']) && !empty($_GET['something']) ) {
> >>>>> // do something here with $_GET['something']
> >>>>> }
> >>>>
> >>>> The isset is a pointless waste of cycles.
> >>>>
> >>>> -Stut
> >>>
> >>> I've been accuse of that too, but what's your solution?
> >>
> >> In the above example,
> >>
> >> if (isset($_GET['something']) && !empty($_GET['something'])) {
> >>
> >> is the same as...
> >>
> >> if (!empty($_GET['something'])) {
> >>
> >> So, in that particular line of code the isset is a pointless waste of
> >> cycles.
> >>
> >> -Stut
> >>
> > these two lines are not the same infact, with the first, you will not
> > get a E_NOTICE warning, but with the second you will.
>
> No you won't. The empty function does not raise a notice if its argument
> does not exist.
>
> From http://php.net/empty...
>
> "empty() is the opposite of (boolean) var, except that no warning is
> generated when the variable is not set."
Bleh, my mistake... I'm so adverse to empty() I forgot it doesn't
generate notices.
Cheers,
Rob.
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