I was going to use a long string to manipulate a large number of bit flags, keeping the result string in Redis. However, stumbled upon a php bug (?). A byte that contains bits 00001101 read using substr() returns an unexpected value:
$bin = 0b00001101; // 13 - ASCII Carriage return
$c = substr($bin, 0, 1); // read this character
printf("Expectation: 00001101, reality: %08b\n", $c); // 00000001
Ideone
Is the assumption that substr() is binary-safe wrong? Also tried mb_substr(), setting encoding to 8bit with exactly the same result.
You're setting $bin to an integer 13
Using substr() against $bin is casting $bin to a string ("13")
You're reading the first character of that string ("1")
Using printf() with %b, you're explicitly casting that string back to an integer 1
the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as a binary number.
EDIT
This code should give the result that you're expecting
$bin = 0b00001101; // 13 - ASCII Carriage return
$c = substr(chr($bin), 0, 1); // read this character
printf("Expectation: 00001101, reality: %08b\n", ord($c)); // 00001101
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