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Home/ Questions/Q 6228777
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T09:26:51+00:00 2026-05-24T09:26:51+00:00

I was going through operator precedence section of php.net and came across this example

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I was going through operator precedence section of php.net and came across this example which says

$a = 1;
$b = null;
$c = isset($a) && isset($b);
$d = ( isset($a) and isset($b) );
$e = isset($a) and isset($b);
var_dump($a, $b, $c, $d, $e);
//Result:
int(1)
NULL
bool(false)
bool(false) <== I get this
bool(true)  <== I do not get this

I use quite a lot of debugging and verbose print(_r) statements in my code to keep track of where I am in the code. So I use $debug and print_r($dataArray) or $verbose and print "Updating dataArray\n" as separate statements in between the code, allowing me to control these print(_r) statements. This comes from my BASH experience where I used to write lot of [[ $condition ]] && { #Do if true } || { #Do if false }. In BASH, I knew they are short circuited and used this fact to write lot of simple one liners.
Now I am observing that lot of this practice(of writing $verbose and print) is slowly creeping into my if statements. I am aware this is NOT a recommended practice and can bite me in the back. However, I do want to master this skill as I enjoy writing such one liners and want to use it as my personal style.

So my question(s) is(are) :

  1. Which operator (&& or and) is short circuited ?
  2. The manual says && takes precedence over and, but can someone exemplify this by mixing the short circuited operator feature/functionality/characteristic with operator precedence. (basically mix and match of precedence and short-circuiting)

Kindly elaborate on both the short-circuiting as well as return value nature of the operators.

PS: 1. I hope associativity of these operators is same and intuitive, but if you know any quirks, please enlighten me.
PS: 2. If you still feel like warning me against the perils of such practice, kindly include examples.

EDIT : After changing my simple $var = mysql_(...) or die() code by replacing or with ||, I discovered how annoying it can be to use the || and && operators instead of and and or. The code simply didn’t work ! To my understanding, the former construct assigns a return value of TRUE or FALSE to $var, which in turn make all sequential use of $var to generate warning/error/unexpected behavior. The latter construct assigns result of mysql_(...) to $var first and then evaluates the compound of = and die.
This is a good lesson for me, I better 1. Start using PDO/mysqli and handle errors on my own 2. Think twice before writing something I called above as personal style.
//note to self : don’t use experience of one scripting/interpretive language while writing code in another, each one is unique and has its own quirks and pitfalls, and thats just sad *sigh*

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T09:26:52+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 9:26 am

    The code

    $e = isset($a) and isset($b);
    

    is parsed the same as

    ($e = isset($a)) and isset($b);
    

    Therefore $e, as determined by isset($a) and the assignment, is true – independent of evaluating isset($b).

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