In php, is 0 treated as empty?
In case of numeric values you should use is_numeric function:
$var = 0;
if (is_numeric($var))
{
echo "Its not empty";
}
else
{
echo "Its empty";
}
Use strlen()
instead.
I ran onto the same issue using 1/0 as possible values for some variables.
I am using if (strlen($_POST['myValue']) == 0)
to test if there is a character or not in my variable.
http://php.net/empty
The following things are considered to be empty:
- "" (an empty string)
- 0 (0 as an integer)
- 0.0 (0 as a float)
- "0" (0 as a string)
- NULL
- FALSE
- array() (an empty array)
- var $var; (a variable declared, but without a value in a class)
Note that this is exactly the same list as for a coercion to Boolean false
. empty
is simply !isset($var) || !$var
. Try isset
instead.
I was wondering why nobody suggested the extremely handy Type comparison table. It answers every question about the common functions and compare operators.
A snippet:
Expression | empty($x)
----------------+--------
$x = ""; | true
$x = null | true
var $x; | true
$x is undefined | true
$x = array(); | true
$x = false; | true
$x = true; | false
$x = 1; | false
$x = 42; | false
$x = 0; | true
$x = -1; | false
$x = "1"; | false
$x = "0"; | true
$x = "-1"; | false
$x = "php"; | false
$x = "true"; | false
$x = "false"; | false
Along other cheatsheets, I always keep a hardcopy of this table on my desk in case I'm not sure