PHP: Comparing Objects - Manual in Deutsh
PHP: Comparing Objects - Manual in French
PHP: Comparing Objects - Manual in Polish

You Are At PHP: Comparing Objects - Manual Area


recent searches:
include functions , variable functions , post functions...




If you are new to PHP or just need to refresh your skills, this is the place to start. This series of tutorials will give you the basic knowledge you will need to create a simple PHP website.

PHP is a reflective programming language originally designed for producing dynamic web pages.[1] PHP is used mainly in server-side scripting, but can be used from a command line interface or in standalone graphical applications. Textual User Interfaces can also be created using ncurses.

PHP Manual
PrevChapter 19. Classes and Objects (PHP 5)Next

Comparing objects

In PHP 5, object comparison is more complicated than in PHP 4 and more in accordance to what one will expect from an Object Oriented Language (not that PHP 5 is such a language).

When using the comparison operator (==), object variables are compared in a simple manner, namely: Two object instances are equal if they have the same attributes and values, and are instances of the same class.

On the other hand, when using the identity operator (===), object variables are identical if and only if they refer to the same instance of the same class.

An example will clarify these rules.

Example 19-32. Example of object comparison in PHP 5

<?php
function bool2str($bool)
{
    if (
$bool === false) {
        return
'FALSE';
    } else {
        return
'TRUE';
    }
}

function
compareObjects(&$o1, &$o2)
{
    echo
'o1 == o2 : ' . bool2str($o1 == $o2) . "\n";
    echo
'o1 != o2 : ' . bool2str($o1 != $o2) . "\n";
    echo
'o1 === o2 : ' . bool2str($o1 === $o2) . "\n";
    echo
'o1 !== o2 : ' . bool2str($o1 !== $o2) . "\n";
}

class
Flag
{
    
public $flag;

    function
Flag($flag = true) {
        
$this->flag = $flag;
    }
}

class
OtherFlag
{
    
public $flag;

    function
OtherFlag($flag = true) {
        
$this->flag = $flag;
    }
}

$o = new Flag();
$p = new Flag();
$q = $o;
$r = new OtherFlag();

echo
"Two instances of the same class\n";
compareObjects($o, $p);

echo
"\nTwo references to the same instance\n";
compareObjects($o, $q);

echo
"\nInstances of two different classes\n";
compareObjects($o, $r);
?>

The above example will output:

Two instances of the same class
o1 == o2 : TRUE
o1 != o2 : FALSE
o1 === o2 : FALSE
o1 !== o2 : TRUE

Two references to the same instance
o1 == o2 : TRUE
o1 != o2 : FALSE
o1 === o2 : TRUE
o1 !== o2 : FALSE

Instances of two different classes
o1 == o2 : FALSE
o1 != o2 : TRUE
o1 === o2 : FALSE
o1 !== o2 : TRUE

Grzejniki
Wycieraczki
kredyt hipoteczny doradca finansowy wrocław
kredyt banki
Koszulki

Another Useful functions:


language.oop5.visibility | language.oop5.typehinting | language.oop5.static | language.oop5.reflection | language.oop5.patterns | language.oop5.paamayim-nekudotayim | language.oop5.overloading | language.oop5.object-comparison | language.oop5.magic | language.oop5.iterations | language.oop5.interfaces | language.oop5 | language.oop5.final | language.oop5.decon | language.oop5.constants | language.oop5.cloning | language.oop5.basic | language.oop5.autoload | language.oop5.abstract |


PHP is a widely-used general-purpose scripting language that is especially suited for Web development and can be embedded into HTML. If you are new to PHP and want to get some idea of how it works, try the introductory tutorial. After that, check out the online manual, and the example archive sites and some of the other resources available in the links section.