Comparison operators, as their name implies, allow you to compare two values. You may also be interested in viewing the type comparison tables, as they show examples of various type related comparisons.
Table 15-4. Comparison Operators
Example | Name | Result |
---|---|---|
$a == $b | Equal | TRUE if $a is equal to $b. |
$a === $b | Identical | TRUE if $a is equal to $b, and they are of the same type. (introduced in PHP 4) |
$a != $b | Not equal | TRUE if $a is not equal to $b. |
$a <> $b | Not equal | TRUE if $a is not equal to $b. |
$a !== $b | Not identical | TRUE if $a is not equal to $b, or they are not of the same type. (introduced in PHP 4) |
$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. |
If you compare an integer with a string, the string is converted to a number. If you compare two numerical strings, they are compared as integers. These rules also apply to the switch statement.
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See also strcasecmp(), strcmp(), Array operators, and the manual section on Types.
Another conditional operator is the "?:" (or ternary) operator.