Comparison operators, as their name implies, allow you to compare two values. You may also be interested in viewingthe type comparison tables, as they show examples of various type related comparisons.
Example | Name | Result |
---|---|---|
$a == $b | Equal | true if$a is equal to$b after type juggling. |
$a === $b | Identical | true if$a is equal to$b, and they are of the same type. |
$a != $b | Not equal | true if$a is not equal to$b after type juggling. |
$a <> $b | Not equal | true if$a is not equal to$b after type juggling. |
$a !== $b | Not identical | true if$a is not equal to$b, or they are not of the same type. |
$a < $b | Less than | true if$a is strictly less than$b. |
$a > $b | Greater than | true if$a is strictly greater than$b. |
$a <= $b | Less than or equal to | true if$a is less than or equal to$b. |
$a >= $b | Greater than or equal to | true if$a is greater than or equal to$b. |
$a <=> $b | Spaceship | Anint less than, equal to, or greater than zero when$a is less than, equal to, or greater than$b, respectively. |
If both operands arenumeric strings, or one operand is a number and the other one is anumeric string, then the comparison is done numerically. These rules also apply to theswitch statement. The type conversion does not take place when the comparison is===
or!==
as this involves comparing the type as well as the value.
Prior to PHP 8.0.0, if astring is compared to a number or a numeric string then thestring was converted to a number before performing the comparison. This can lead to surprising results as can be seen with the following example:
<?php
var_dump(0=="a");
var_dump("1"=="01");
var_dump("10"=="1e1");
var_dump(100=="1e2");
switch ("a") {
case0:
echo"0";
break;
case"a":
echo"a";
break;
}
?>
Output of the above example in PHP 7:
bool(true)bool(true)bool(true)bool(true)0
Output of the above example in PHP 8:
bool(false)bool(true)bool(true)bool(true)a
Example #1 Comparison Operators
<?php
// Integers
echo1<=>1,' ';// 0
echo1<=>2,' ';// -1
echo2<=>1,' ';// 1
// Floats
echo1.5<=>1.5,' ';// 0
echo1.5<=>2.5,' ';// -1
echo2.5<=>1.5,' ';// 1
// Strings
echo"a"<=>"a",' ';// 0
echo"a"<=>"b",' ';// -1
echo"b"<=>"a",' ';// 1
echo"a"<=>"aa",' ';// -1
echo"zz"<=>"aa",' ';// 1
// Arrays
echo [] <=> [],' ';// 0
echo [1,2,3] <=> [1,2,3],' ';// 0
echo [1,2,3] <=> [],' ';// 1
echo [1,2,3] <=> [1,2,1],' ';// 1
echo [1,2,3] <=> [1,2,4],' ';// -1
// Objects
$a= (object) ["a"=>"b"];
$b= (object) ["a"=>"b"];
echo$a<=>$b,' ';// 0
$a= (object) ["a"=>"b"];
$b= (object) ["a"=>"c"];
echo$a<=>$b,' ';// -1
$a= (object) ["a"=>"c"];
$b= (object) ["a"=>"b"];
echo$a<=>$b,' ';// 1
// not only values are compared; keys must match
$a= (object) ["a"=>"b"];
$b= (object) ["b"=>"b"];
echo$a<=>$b,' ';// 1
?>
For various types, comparison is done according to the following table (in order).
Type of Operand 1 | Type of Operand 2 | Result |
---|---|---|
null orstring | string | Convertnull to "", numerical or lexical comparison |
bool ornull | anything | Convert both sides tobool,false <true |
object | object | Built-in classes can define its own comparison, different classes are incomparable, same class seeObject Comparison |
string,resource,int orfloat | string,resource,int orfloat | Translate strings and resources to numbers, usual math |
array | array | Array with fewer members is smaller, if key from operand 1 is not found in operand 2 then arrays are incomparable, otherwise - compare value by value (see following example) |
object | anything | object is always greater |
array | anything | array is always greater |
Example #2 Boolean/null comparison
<?php
// Bool and null are compared as bool always
var_dump(1==TRUE);// TRUE - same as (bool) 1 == TRUE
var_dump(0==FALSE);// TRUE - same as (bool) 0 == FALSE
var_dump(100<TRUE);// FALSE - same as (bool) 100 < TRUE
var_dump(-10<FALSE);// FALSE - same as (bool) -10 < FALSE
var_dump(min(-100, -10,NULL,10,100));// NULL - (bool) NULL < (bool) -100 is FALSE < TRUE
?>
Example #3 Transcription of standard array comparison
<?php
// Arrays are compared like this with standard comparison operators as well as the spaceship operator.
functionstandard_array_compare($op1,$op2)
{
if (count($op1) <count($op2)) {
return -1;// $op1 < $op2
} elseif (count($op1) >count($op2)) {
return1;// $op1 > $op2
}
foreach ($op1as$key=>$val) {
if (!array_key_exists($key,$op2)) {
return1;
} elseif ($val<$op2[$key]) {
return -1;
} elseif ($val>$op2[$key]) {
return1;
}
}
return0;// $op1 == $op2
}
?>
Because of the wayfloats are represented internally, you should not test twofloats for equality.
See the documentation forfloat for more information.
Note: Be aware that PHP's type juggling is not always obvious when comparing values of different types, particularly comparingints tobools orints tostrings. It is therefore generally advisable to use
===
and!==
comparisons rather than==
and!=
in most cases.
While identity comparison (===
and!==
) can be applied to arbitrary values, the other comparison operators should only be applied to comparable values. The result of comparing incomparable values is undefined, and should not be relied upon.
Another conditional operator is the "?:" (or ternary) operator.
Example #4 Assigning a default value
<?php
// Example usage for: Ternary Operator
$action= (empty($_POST['action'])) ?'default':$_POST['action'];
// The above is identical to this if/else statement
if (empty($_POST['action'])) {
$action='default';
} else {
$action=$_POST['action'];
}
?>
(expr1) ? (expr2) : (expr3)
evaluates toexpr2 ifexpr1 evaluates totrue
, andexpr3 ifexpr1 evaluates tofalse
. It is possible to leave out the middle part of the ternary operator. Expressionexpr1 ?: expr3
evaluates to the result ofexpr1 ifexpr1 evaluates totrue
, andexpr3 otherwise.expr1 is only evaluated once in this case.
Note: Please note that the ternary operator is an expression, and that it doesn't evaluate to a variable, but to the result of an expression. This is important to know if you want to return a variable by reference. The statement
return $var == 42 ? $a : $b;
in a return-by-reference function will therefore not work and a warning is issued.
Note:
It is recommended to avoid "stacking" ternary expressions. PHP's behaviour when using more than one unparenthesized ternary operator within a single expression is non-obvious compared to other languages. Indeed prior to PHP 8.0.0, ternary expressions were evaluated left-associative, instead of right-associative like most other programming languages. Relying on left-associativity is deprecated as of PHP 7.4.0. As of PHP 8.0.0, the ternary operator is non-associative.
Example #5 Non-obvious Ternary Behaviour
<?php
// on first glance, the following appears to output 'true'
echo (true?'true':false?'t':'f');
// however, the actual output of the above is 't' prior to PHP 8.0.0
// this is because ternary expressions are left-associative
// the following is a more obvious version of the same code as above
echo ((true?'true':false) ?'t':'f');
// here, one can see that the first expression is evaluated to 'true', which
// in turn evaluates to (bool) true, thus returning the true branch of the
// second ternary expression.
?>
Note:
Chaining of short-ternaries (
?:
), however, is stable and behaves reasonably. It will evaluate to the first argument that evaluates to a non-falsy value. Note that undefined values will still raise a warning.Example #6 Short-ternary chaining
<?php
echo0?:1?:2?:3,PHP_EOL;//1
echo0?:0?:2?:3,PHP_EOL;//2
echo0?:0?:0?:3,PHP_EOL;//3
?>
Another useful shorthand operator is the "??" (or null coalescing) operator.
Example #7 Assigning a default value
<?php
// Example usage for: Null Coalesce Operator
$action=$_POST['action'] ??'default';
// The above is identical to this if/else statement
if (isset($_POST['action'])) {
$action=$_POST['action'];
} else {
$action='default';
}
?>
(expr1) ?? (expr2)
evaluates toexpr2 ifexpr1 isnull
, andexpr1 otherwise.In particular, this operator does not emit a notice or warning if the left-hand side value does not exist, just likeisset(). This is especially useful on array keys.
Note: Please note that the null coalescing operator is an expression, and that it doesn't evaluate to a variable, but to the result of an expression. This is important to know if you want to return a variable by reference. The statement
return $foo ?? $bar;
in a return-by-reference function will therefore not work and a warning is issued.
Note:
The null coalescing operator has low precedence. That means if mixing it with other operators (such as string concatenation or arithmetic operators) parentheses will likely be required.
<?php
// Raises a warning that $name is undefined.
print'Mr. '.$name??'Anonymous';
// Prints "Mr. Anonymous"
print'Mr. '. ($name??'Anonymous');
?>
Note:
Please note that the null coalescing operator allows for simple nesting:
Example #8 Nesting null coalescing operator
<?php
$foo=null;
$bar=null;
$baz=1;
$qux=2;
echo$foo??$bar??$baz??$qux;// outputs 1
?>
I couldn't find much info on stacking the new ternary operator, so I ran some tests:
<?php
echo0?:1?:2?:3;//1
echo1?:0?:3?:2;//1
echo2?:1?:0?:3;//2
echo3?:2?:1?:0;//3
echo0?:1?:2?:3;//1
echo0?:0?:2?:3;//2
echo0?:0?:0?:3;//3
?>
It works just as expected, returning the first non-false value within a group of expressions.
Please note that using the null coalescing operator to check properties on a class that has the __get magic method (without an __isset magic method) invokes the magic method.
For example:
<?php
classA
{
public function__get($property)
{
echo'Called __get for '.$property.PHP_EOL;
}
}
$a= newA();
echo'Trying null coalescing operator'.PHP_EOL;
$b=$a->test??5;
echo'Trying isset()'.PHP_EOL;
if (isset($a->test)) {
$b=$a->test;
} else {
$b=5;
}
?>
Very careful when reading PHP documentation, Here's a lot of miss information.
According to documentation, They say's (int) 0 == (string) "a" is true. But it is not in PHP 8.
var_dump(0 == "a"); // 0 == 0 -> true
Now In PHP 8 it's False.
Note: according to the spec, PHP's comparison operators are not transitive. For example, the following are all true in PHP5:
"11" < "a" < 2 < "11"
As a result, the outcome of sorting an array depends on the order the elements appear in the pre-sort array. The following code will dump out two arrays with *different* orderings:
<?php
$a= array(2,"a","11",2);
$b= array(2,"11","a",2);
sort($a);
var_dump($a);
sort($b);
var_dump($b);
?>
This is not a bug report -- given the spec on this documentation page, what PHP does is "correct". But that may not be what was intended...
You can't just compare two arrays with the === operator
like you would think to find out if they are equal or not. This is more complicated when you have multi-dimensional arrays. Here is a recursive comparison function.
<?php
/**
* Compares two arrays to see if they contain the same values. Returns TRUE or FALSE.
* usefull for determining if a record or block of data was modified (perhaps by user input)
* prior to setting a "date_last_updated" or skipping updating the db in the case of no change.
*
* @param array $a1
* @param array $a2
* @return boolean
*/
functionarray_compare_recursive($a1,$a2)
{
if (!(is_array($a1) and (is_array($a2)))) { returnFALSE;}
if (!count($a1) ==count($a2))
{
returnFALSE;// arrays don't have same number of entries
}
foreach ($a1as$key=>$val)
{
if (!array_key_exists($key,$a2))
{returnFALSE;// uncomparable array keys don't match
}
elseif (is_array($val) andis_array($a2[$key]))// if both entries are arrays then compare recursive
{if (!array_compare_recursive($val,$a2[$key])) returnFALSE;
}
elseif (!($val===$a2[$key]))// compare entries must be of same type.
{returnFALSE;
}
}
returnTRUE;// $a1 === $a2
}
?>
Extending from here:https://www.php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php#121907
$a = ['a' => 1, 'b' => 2, 'c' => 3, 'e' => 4];
$b = ['a' => 1, 'b' => 2, 'd' => 3, 'e' => 4];
echo $a > $b; // 0
echo $b > $a; // 0
echo $a <$b; // 0
echo $b < $a; // 0
If using spaceship operator then it is returning true like :
echo $a <=> $b; //1
echo $b <=> $a; //1
echo $a <=> $b; //1
echo $b <=> $a; //1
When you want to know if two arrays contain the same values, regardless of the values' order, you cannot use "==" or "===". In other words:
<?php
(array(1,2) == array(2,1)) ===false;
?>
To answer that question, use:
<?php
functionarray_equal($a,$b) {
return (is_array($a) &&is_array($b) &&array_diff($a,$b) ===array_diff($b,$a));
}
?>
A related, but more strict problem, is if you need to ensure that two arrays contain the same key=>value pairs, regardless of the order of the pairs. In that case, use:
<?php
functionarray_identical($a,$b) {
return (is_array($a) &&is_array($b) &&array_diff_assoc($a,$b) ===array_diff_assoc($b,$a));
}
?>
Example:
<?php
$a= array (2,1);
$b= array (1,2);
// true === array_equal($a, $b);
// false === array_identical($a, $b);
$a= array ('a'=>2,'b'=>1);
$b= array ('b'=>1,'a'=>2);
// true === array_identical($a, $b)
// true === array_equal($a, $b)
?>
(See also the solution "rshawiii at yahoo dot com" posted)
Please be careful when you try to compare strings that have a plus sign `+` at the beginning (such as phone number, etc). When you use the Equal operator `==` PHP will ignore the plus sign. Use Identical operator `===` instead
Example:
$str1 = "62";
$str2 = "+62";
var_dump($str1 == $str2); // bool(true)
var_dump($str1 === $str2); // bool(false)
Between the "shortcut ternary" (aka "elvis") and "spaceship" operators, you can write some quite compact comparison functions for usort and its ilk.
If you want to sort an array of associative arrays by several different keys you can chain them in the same way that you can list column names in an SQL ORDER BY clause.
<?php
usort($array, fn($a,$b) =>$a['a'] <=>$b['a']
?:$b['b'] <=>$a['b']
?:$a['c'] <=>$b['c']);
?>
Will sort the array by column 'a', then by column 'b' descending, then by column 'c'; or in SQL-speak 'ORDER BY a, b DESC, c".
Searching for "double question mark" operator should find this page (and hopefully after this comment the crawlers will agree)
Care must be taken when using the spaceship operator with arrays that do not have the same keys:
- Contrary to the notes above ("Example #2 Transcription of standard array comparison"), it does *not* return null if the left-hand array contains a key that the right-hand array does not.
- Because of this, the result depends on the order you do the comparison in.
For example:
<?php
$a= ['a'=>1,'b'=>2,'c'=>3,'e'=>4];
$b= ['a'=>1,'b'=>2,'d'=>3,'e'=>4];
var_dump($a<=>$b);// int(1) : $a > $b because $a has the 'c' key and $b doesn't.
var_dump($b<=>$a);// int(1) : $b > $a because $b has the 'd' key and $a doesn't.
?>
In the table "Comparison with Various Types", please move the last line about "Object" to be above the line about "Array", since Object is considered to be greater than Array (tested on 5.3.3)
(Please remove my "Anonymous" post of the same content before. You could check IP to see that I forgot to type my name)
A < B and still B < A...
$A = [1 => 1, 2 => 0, 3 => 1];
$B = [1 => 1, 3 => 0, 2 => 1];
var_dump($A < $B); // TRUE
var_dump($B < $A); // TRUE
var_dump($A > $B); // TRUE
var_dump($B > $A); // TRUE
Next - C and D are comparable, but neither C < D nor D < C (and still C != D)...
$C = [1 => 1, 2 => 1, 3 => 0];
$D = [1 => 1, 3 => 1, 2 => 0];
var_dump($C < $D); // FALSE
var_dump($D < $C); // FALSE
var_dump($C > $D); // FALSE
var_dump($D > $C); // FALSE
var_dump($D == $C); // FALSE
It's worth noting that there can be a difference in the logical operation of shorthand ternary (expr1 ?: expr2) vs the full version (expr1 ? expr1 : expr2). The shorthand style may also offer a slight performance enhancement because the initial expression will only be evaluated once.
Example:
<?php
// my_func() will be called twice here
// additionally, my_func() may not return the same value both times!
$var=my_func() ?my_func() :false;
// my_func() will only be called once here
$var=my_func() ?:false;