Some references to the type "double" may remain in the manual. Consider
double the same as float; the two names exist only for historic reasons.
The type of a variable is not usually set by the programmer; rather, it is
decided at runtime by PHP depending on the context in which that variable is
used.
Note:
To check the type and value of an
expression, use the
var_dump() function.
To get a human-readable representation of a type for debugging, use the
gettype() function. To check for a certain type, do
not use gettype(), but rather the
is_type functions. Some
examples:
<?php $a_bool = TRUE; // a boolean $a_str = "foo"; // a string $a_str2 = 'foo'; // a string $an_int = 12; // an integer
echo gettype($a_bool); // prints out: boolean echo gettype($a_str); // prints out: string
// If this is an integer, increment it by four if (is_int($an_int)) { $an_int += 4; }
// If $bool is a string, print it out // (does not print out anything) if (is_string($a_bool)) { echo "String: $a_bool"; } ?>
To forcibly convert a variable to a certain type, either
cast the variable or use
the settype() function on it.
Note that a variable may be evaluated with different values in certain
situations, depending on what type it is at the time. For more information,
see the section on Type
Juggling. The type comparison
tables may also be useful, as they show examples of various
type-related comparisons.