Is there a concise way to check if a variable is set, and then echo it without repeating the same variable name?
Instead of this:
<?php
if(!empty($this->variable)) {
echo '<a href="', $this->variable, '">Link</a>';
}
?>
I'm thinking about something in the lines of this C-style pseudocode:
<?php
echo if(!empty($this->variable, '<a href="', %s, '">Link</a>'));
?>
PHP has sprintf, but it doesn't quite do what I was hoping for. If course I could make a method/function out of it, but surely there must be a way to do it "natively"?
Update:
Ternary operations would also repeat the $this->variable
part, if I understood it?
echo (!empty($this->variable) ? '<a href="',$this->variable,'">Link</a> : "nothing");
The closest you can get to what you are looking for is using short form of ternary operator (available since PHP5.3)
echo $a ?: "not set"; // will print $a if $a evaluates to `true` or "not set" if not
But this will trigger "Undefined variable" notice. Which you can obviously suppress with @
echo @$a ?: "not set";
Still, not the most elegant/clean solution.
So, the cleanest code you can hope for is
echo isset($a) ? $a: '';
Update:
PHP 7 introduces a new feature: Null coalescing operator
Here is the example from php.net.
<?php
// Fetches the value of $_GET['user'] and returns 'nobody'
// if it does not exist.
$username = $_GET['user'] ?? 'nobody';
// This is equivalent to:
$username = isset($_GET['user']) ? $_GET['user'] : 'nobody';
// Coalescing can be chained: this will return the first
// defined value out of $_GET['user'], $_POST['user'], and
// 'nobody'.
$username = $_GET['user'] ?? $_POST['user'] ?? 'nobody';
?>
For those not using PHP7 yet here is my original answer...
I use a small function to achieve this:
function ifset(&$var, $else = '') {
return isset($var) && $var ? $var : $else;
}
Example:
$a = 'potato';
echo ifset($a); // outputs 'potato'
echo ifset($a, 'carrot'); // outputs 'potato'
echo ifset($b); // outputs nothing
echo ifset($b, 'carrot'); // outputs 'carrot'
Caveat: As Inigo pointed out in a comment below one undesirable side effect of using this function is that it can modify the object / array that you are inspecting. For example:
$fruits = new stdClass;
$fruits->lemon = 'sour';
echo ifset($fruits->peach);
var_dump($fruits);
Will output:
(object) array(
'lemon' => 'sour',
'peach' => NULL,
)
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