Return false:
function lookup($name) { if (empty($name)) { return false; } ... } if (false !== lookup($name)) { /* act upon lookup */ }
I n PHP, non-true values aren't standardized and can easily cause errors. As a result, it's best if all your functions return the defined false keyword because this works best when checking a logical value.
Other possibilities are '' or 0. However, while all three evaluate to non-true inside an if, there's actually a difference among them. Also, sometimes a return value of 0 is a meaningful result, but you still want to be able to also return failure.
For example, strpos( ) returns the location of the first substring within a string. If the substring isn't found, strpos( ) returns false. If it is found, it returns an integer with the position. Therefore, to find a substring position, you might write:
if (strpos($string, $substring)) { /* found it! */ }
However, if $substring is found at the exact start of $string, the value returned is 0. Unfortunately, inside the if, this evaluates to false, so the conditional is not executed. Here's the correct way to handle the return value of strpos( ):
if (false !== strpos($string, $substring)) { /* found it! */ }
Also, false is always guaranteed to be false — in the current version of PHP and forever more. Other values may not guarantee this. For example, in PHP 3, empty('0') was true, but it changed to false in PHP 4.
The introduction to Chapter 5 for more on the truth values of variables; documentation on strpos( ) at http://www.php.net/strpos and empty( ) at http://www.php.net/empty; information on migrating from PHP 3 to PHP 4 at http://www.php.net/migration4.
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