Re: [PHP] isset doesn't like "->"?

2002-11-10 Thread Michael Sims
On Sun, 10 Nov 2002 18:34:52 -0600, you wrote: >PS: what is the proper term for the "->" syntax? pointer? In Perl it's called an infix operator. I think in PHP the technical term for it is that "->" thingy... :-) -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://ww

Re: [PHP] isset doesn't like "->"?

2002-11-10 Thread UberGoober
> That's because isset() is expecting a variable, not a function. In your > first example, you're trying to see if a function is set, not a > variable. In your second example, you're doing it right... > > ---John Holmes... That actually makes sense once I thought about it, a function referencing

RE: [PHP] isset doesn't like "->"?

2002-11-10 Thread John W. Holmes
> I don't know if this is a bug, or what, but I get an error when trying the > following > > if ( isset($adodbobject->Fields('myresult') ) ) { // do something } > > PHP throws an error ( not warning ) saying: > Parse error: parse error, expecting `','' or `')'' in /path/to/index.php > on > line 45

[PHP] isset doesn't like "->"?

2002-11-10 Thread UberGoober
I don't know if this is a bug, or what, but I get an error when trying the following if ( isset($adodbobject->Fields('myresult') ) ) { // do something } PHP throws an error ( not warning ) saying: Parse error: parse error, expecting `','' or `')'' in /path/to/index.php on line 45 However, when I