Clancy wrote:
> On Mon, 16 Mar 2009 17:06:35 -0500, nos...@mckenzies.net (Shawn McKenzie)
> wrote:
>
>> Shawn McKenzie wrote:
>>> Paul M Foster wrote:
I had never completely read over the rules with regard to comparisons in
PHP, and was recently alarmed to find that $str1 == $str2 might
On Mon, 16 Mar 2009 17:06:35 -0500, nos...@mckenzies.net (Shawn McKenzie) wrote:
>Shawn McKenzie wrote:
>> Paul M Foster wrote:
>>> I had never completely read over the rules with regard to comparisons in
>>> PHP, and was recently alarmed to find that $str1 == $str2 might not
>>> compare the way I
On Tue, 2009-03-17 at 08:09 +0200, Alpár Török wrote:
> 2009/3/17 Shawn McKenzie :
> > Shawn McKenzie wrote:
> >> Paul M Foster wrote:
> >>> I had never completely read over the rules with regard to comparisons in
> >>> PHP, and was recently alarmed to find that $str1 == $str2 might not
> >>> compa
2009/3/17 Shawn McKenzie :
> Shawn McKenzie wrote:
>> Paul M Foster wrote:
>>> I had never completely read over the rules with regard to comparisons in
>>> PHP, and was recently alarmed to find that $str1 == $str2 might not
>>> compare the way I thought they would. Is it common practice among PHP
>
Shawn McKenzie wrote:
> Paul M Foster wrote:
>> I had never completely read over the rules with regard to comparisons in
>> PHP, and was recently alarmed to find that $str1 == $str2 might not
>> compare the way I thought they would. Is it common practice among PHP
>> coders to use strcmp() instead
Paul M Foster wrote:
> I had never completely read over the rules with regard to comparisons in
> PHP, and was recently alarmed to find that $str1 == $str2 might not
> compare the way I thought they would. Is it common practice among PHP
> coders to use strcmp() instead of == in making string compa
6 matches
Mail list logo