I'm running a PHP script and continue to receive errors like:
Notice: Undefined variable: my_variable_name in C:\wamp\www\mypath\index.php on line 10
Notice: Undefined index: my_index C:\wamp\www\mypath\index.php on line 11
Warning: Undefined array key "my_index" in C:\wamp\www\mypath\index.php on line 11
Line 10 and 11 looks like this:
echo "My variable value is: " . $my_variable_name;
echo "My index value is: " . $my_array["my_index"];
What is the meaning of these error messages?
Why do they appear all of a sudden? I used to use this script for years and I've never had any problem.
How do I fix them?
This is a General Reference question for people to link to as duplicate, instead of having to explain the issue over and over again. I feel this is necessary because most real-world answers on this issue are very specific.
Related Meta discussion:
From the vast wisdom of the PHP Manual:
Relying on the default value of an uninitialized variable is problematic in the case of including one file into another which uses the same variable name. It is also a major security risk with register_globals turned on. {-code-10} level error is issued in case of working with uninitialized variables, however not in the case of appending elements to the uninitialized array. isset() language construct can be used to detect if a variable has been already initialized. Additionally and more ideal is the solution of empty() since it does not generate a warning or error message if the variable is not initialized.
From PHP documentation:
No warning is generated if the variable does not exist. That means empty() is essentially the concise equivalent to !isset($var) || $var == false.
This means that you could use onlyempty()
to determine if the variable is set, and in addition it checks the variable against the following,0
,0.0
,""
,"0"
,null
,false
or[]
.
Example:
$o = [];
@$var = ["",0,null,1,2,3,$foo,$o['myIndex']];
array_walk($var, function($v) {
echo (!isset($v) || $v == false) ? 'true ' : 'false';
echo ' ' . (empty($v) ? 'true' : 'false');
echo "\n";
});
Test the above snippet in the 3v4l.org online PHP editor
Although PHP does not require a variable declaration, it does recommend it in order to avoid some security vulnerabilities or bugs where one would forget to give a value to a variable that will be used later in the script. What PHP does in the case of undeclared variables is issue a very low level error,{-code-10}
, one that is not even reported by default, but the Manual advises to allow during development.
Ways to deal with the issue:
Recommended: Declare your variables, for example when you try to append a string to an undefined variable. Or use /
to check if they are declared before referencing them, as in:
//Initializing variable
$value = ""; //Initialization value; Examples
//"" When you want to append stuff later
//0 When you want to add numbers later
//isset()
$value = isset($_POST['value']) ? $_POST['value'] : '';
//empty()
$value = !empty($_POST['value']) ? $_POST['value'] : '';
This has become much cleaner as of PHP 7.0, now you can use the null coalesce operator:
// Null coalesce operator - No need to explicitly initialize the variable.
$value = $_POST['value'] ?? '';
Set a custom error handler for {-code-10} and redirect the messages away from the standard output (maybe to a log file):
set_error_handler('myHandlerForMinorErrors', {-code-10} | E_STRICT)
Disable {-code-10} from reporting. A quick way to exclude just{-code-10}
is:
error_reporting( error_reporting() & ~{-code-10} )
Suppress the error with the @ operator.
Note: It's strongly recommended to implement just point 1.
This notice/warning appears when you (or PHP) try to access an undefined index of an array.
Ways to deal with the issue:
Check if the index exists before you access it. For this you can use or
:
//isset()
$value = isset($array['my_index']) ? $array['my_index'] : '';
//array_key_exists()
$value = array_key_exists('my_index', $array) ? $array['my_index'] : '';
The language construct may generate this when it attempts to access an array index that does not exist:
list($a, $b) = array(0 => 'a');
//or
list($one, $two) = explode(',', 'test string');
Two variables are used to access two array elements, however there is only one array element, index0
, so this will generate:
Notice: Undefined offset: 1
#$_POST
/$_GET
/$_SESSION
variable
The notices above appear often when working with$_POST
,$_GET
or$_SESSION
. For$_POST
and$_GET
you just have to check if the index exists or not before you use them. For$_SESSION
you have to make sure you have the session started with and that the index also exists.
Also note that all 3 variables are superglobals and are uppercase.
Related:
Try these
Q1: this notice means $varname is not defined at current scope of the script.
Q2: Use of isset(), empty() conditions before using any suspicious variable works well.
// recommended solution for recent PHP versions
$user_name = $_SESSION['user_name'] ?? '';
// pre-7 PHP versions
$user_name = '';
if (!empty($_SESSION['user_name'])) {
$user_name = $_SESSION['user_name'];
}
Or, as a quick and dirty solution:
// not the best solution, but works
// in your php setting use, it helps hiding site wide notices
error_reporting(E_ALL ^ E_NOTICE);
Note about sessions:
When using sessions,session_start();
is required to be placed inside all files using sessions.
For undesired and redundant notices, one could use the dedicated to ?�hide?� undefined variable/index messages.
$var = @($_GET["optional_param"]);
isset?:
or??
super-supression however. Notices still can get logged. And one may resurrect@
-hidden notices with:set_error_handler("var_dump");
if (isset($_POST["shubmit"]))
in your initial code.@
orisset
only after verifying functionality.Fix the cause first. Not the notices.
is mainly acceptable for$_GET
/$_POST
input parameters, specifically if they're optional.
And since this covers the majority of such questions, let's expand on the most common causes:
$_GET
/$_POST
/$_REQUEST
undefined inputFirst thing you do when encountering an undefined index/offset, is check for typos:$count = $_GET["whatnow?"];
Secondly, if the notice doesn't have an obvious cause, use or
to verify all input arrays for their curent content:
var_dump($_GET);
var_dump($_POST);
//print_r($_REQUEST);
Both will reveal if your script was invoked with the right or any parameters at all.
Alternativey or additionally use your and inspect the network tab for requests and parameters:
POST parameters and GET input will be be shown separately.
For$_GET
parameters you can also peek at the in
print_r($_SERVER);
PHP has some rules to coalesce non-standard parameter names into the superglobals. Apache might do some rewriting as well.
You can also look at supplied raw$_COOKIES
and other HTTP request headers that way.
More obviously look at your browser address bar for GET parameters:
http://example.org/script.php?id=5&sort=desc
Thename=value
pairs after the?
question mark are your query (GET) parameters. Thus this URL could only possibly yield$_GET["id"]
and$_GET["sort"]
.
Finally check your <form>
and<input>
declarations, if you expect a parameter but receive none.
<input name=FOO>
id=
ortitle=
attribute does not suffice.method=POST
form ought to populate$_POST
.method=GET
(or leaving it out) would yield$_GET
variables.action=script.php?get=param
via $_GET and the remainingmethod=POST
fields in $_POST alongside. again, which mashes GET and POST params.
If you are employing mod_rewrite, then you should check both theaccess.log
as well as enable the to figure out absent parameters.
$_FILES
$_FILES["formname"]
.enctype=multipart/form-data
method=POST
in your<form>
declaration.$_COOKIE
$_COOKIE
array is never populated right aftersetcookie()
, but only on any followup HTTP request.Generally because of "bad programming", and a possibility for mistakes now or later.
if (isset($varname))
, before using itIt means you are testing, evaluating, or printing a variable that you have not yet assigned anything to. It means you either have a typo, or you need to check that the variable was initialized to something first. Check your logic paths, it may be set in one path but not in another.
I didn't want to disable notice because it's helpful, but I wanted to avoid too much typing.
My solution was this function:
function ifexists($varname)
{
return(isset($$varname) ? $varname : null);
}
So if I want to reference to $name and echo if exists, I simply write:
<?= ifexists('name') ?>
For array elements:
function ifexistsidx($var,$index)
{
return(isset($var[$index]) ? $var[$index] : null);
}
In a page if I want to refer to $_REQUEST['name']:
<?= ifexistsidx($_REQUEST, 'name') ?>
It??�s because the variable '$user_location' is not getting defined. If you are using any if loop inside, which you are declaring the '$user_location' variable, then you must also have an else loop and define the same. For example:
$a = 10;
if($a == 5) {
$user_location = 'Paris';
}
else {
}
echo $user_location;
The above code will create an error as the if loop is not satisfied and in the else loop '$user_location' was not defined. Still PHP was asked to echo out the variable. So to modify the code you must do the following:
$a = 10;
if($a == 5) {
$user_location='Paris';
}
else {
$user_location='SOMETHING OR BLANK';
}
echo $user_location;
The best way for getting the input string is:
$value = filter_input(INPUT_POST, 'value');
This one-liner is almost equivalent to:
if (!isset($_POST['value'])) {
$value = null;
} elseif (is_array($_POST['value'])) {
$value = false;
} else {
$value = $_POST['value'];
}
If you absolutely want a string value, just like:
$value = (string)filter_input(INPUT_POST, 'value');
In reply to ""Why do they appear all of a sudden? I used to use this script for years and I've never had any problem."
It is very common for most sites to operate under the "default" error reporting of "Show all errors, but not 'notices' and 'deprecated'". This will be set in php.ini and apply to all sites on the server. This means that those "notices" used in the examples will be suppressed (hidden) while other errors, considered more critical, will be shown/recorded.
The other critical setting is the errors can be hidden (i.e.display_errors
set to "off" or "syslog").
What will have happened in this case is that either theerror_reporting
was changed to also show notices (as per examples) and/or that the settings were changed todisplay_errors
on screen (as opposed to suppressing them/logging them).
Why have they changed?
The obvious/simplest answer is that someone adjusted either of these settings in php.ini, or an upgraded version of PHP is now using a different php.ini from before. That's the first place to look.
However it is also possible to override these settings in
and any of these could also have been changed.
There is also the added complication that the web server configuration can enable/disable .htaccess directives, so if you have directives in .htaccess that suddenly start/stop working then you need to check for that.
(.htconf / .htaccess assume you're running as apache. If running command line this won't apply; if running IIS or other webserver then you'll need to check those configs accordingly)
Summary
error_reporting
anddisplay_errors
php directives in php.ini has not changed, or that you're not using a different php.ini from before.error_reporting
anddisplay_errors
php directives in .htconf (or vhosts etc) have not changederror_reporting
anddisplay_errors
php directives in .htaccess have not changederror_reporting
anddisplay_errors
php directives have been set there.The quick fix is to assign your variable to null at the top of your code:
$user_location = null;
Over time, PHP has become a more security-focused language. Settings which used to be turned off by default are now turned on by default. A perfect example of this isE_STRICT
, which became turned on by default as of PHP 5.4.0.
Furthermore, according to PHP documentation, by default,E_NOTICE
is disabled in file php.ini. PHP documentation recommends turning it on for debugging purposes. However, when I download PHP from the Ubuntu repository??�and from BitNami's Windows stack??�I see something else.
; Common Values:
; E_ALL (Show all errors, warnings and notices including coding standards.)
; E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE (Show all errors, except for notices)
; E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE & ~E_STRICT (Show all errors, except for notices and coding standards warnings.)
; E_COMPILE_ERROR|E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR|E_ERROR|E_CORE_ERROR (Show only errors)
; Default Value: E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE & ~E_STRICT & ~E_DEPRECATED
; Development Value: E_ALL
; Production Value: E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED & ~E_STRICT
; http://php.net/error-reporting
error_reporting = E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED & ~E_STRICT
Notice thaterror_reporting
is actually set to the production value by default, not to the "default" value by default. This is somewhat confusing and is not documented outside of php.ini, so I have not validated this on other distributions.
To answer your question, however, this error pops up now when it did not pop up before because:
You installed PHP and the new default settings are somewhat poorly documented but do not excludeE_NOTICE
.
E_NOTICE
warnings like undefined variables and undefined indexes actually help to make your code cleaner and safer. I can tell you that, years ago, keepingE_NOTICE
enabled forced me to declare my variables. It made it a LOT easier to learn C. In C, not declaring variables is much bigger of a nuisance.
Turn offE_NOTICE
by copying the "Default value"E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE & ~E_STRICT & ~E_DEPRECATED
and replacing it with what is currently uncommented after the equals sign inerror_reporting =
. Restart Apache, or PHP if using CGI or FPM. Make sure you are editing the "right" php.ini file. The correct one will be Apache if you are running PHP with Apache, fpm or php-fpm if running PHP-FPM, cgi if running PHP-CGI, etc. This is not the recommended method, but if you have legacy code that's going to be exceedingly difficult to edit, then it might be your best bet.
Turn offE_NOTICE
on the file or folder level. This might be preferable if you have some legacy code but want to do things the "right" way otherwise. To do this, you should consult Apache?�2, Nginx, or whatever your server of choice is. In Apache, you would usephp_value
inside of<Directory>
.
Rewrite your code to be cleaner. If you need to do this while moving to a production environment or don't want someone to see your errors, make sure you are disabling any display of errors, and only logging your errors (seedisplay_errors
andlog_errors
in php.ini and your server settings).
To expand on option 3: This is the ideal. If you can go this route, you should. If you are not going this route initially, consider moving this route eventually by testing your code in a development environment. While you're at it, get rid of~E_STRICT
and~E_DEPRECATED
to see what might go wrong in the future. You're going to see a LOT of unfamiliar errors, but it's going to stop you from having any unpleasant problems when you need to upgrade PHP in the future.
Undefined variable: my_variable_name
- This occurs when a variable has not been defined before use. When the PHP script is executed, it internally just assumes a null value. However, in which scenario would you need to check a variable before it was defined? Ultimately, this is an argument for "sloppy code". As a developer, I can tell you that I love it when I see an open source project where variables are defined as high up in their scopes as they can be defined. It makes it easier to tell what variables are going to pop up in the future and makes it easier to read/learn the code.
function foo()
{
$my_variable_name = '';
//....
if ($my_variable_name) {
// perform some logic
}
}
Undefined index: my_index
- This occurs when you try to access a value in an array and it does not exist. To prevent this error, perform a conditional check.
// verbose way - generally better
if (isset($my_array['my_index'])) {
echo "My index value is: " . $my_array['my_index'];
}
// non-verbose ternary example - I use this sometimes for small rules.
$my_index_val = isset($my_array['my_index'])?$my_array['my_index']:'(undefined)';
echo "My index value is: " . $my_index_val;
Another option is to declare an empty array at the top of your function. This is not always possible.
$my_array = array(
'my_index' => ''
);
//...
$my_array['my_index'] = 'new string';
vim
person these days :).I used to curse this error, but it can be helpful to remind you to escape user input.
For instance, if you thought this was clever, shorthand code:
// Echo whatever the hell this is
<?=$_POST['something']?>
...Think again! A better solution is:
// If this is set, echo a filtered version
<?=isset($_POST['something']) ? html($_POST['something']) : ''?>
(I use a customhtml()
function to escape characters, your mileage may vary)
In PHP 7.0 it's now possible to use the null coalescing operator:
echo "My index value is: " . ($my_array["my_index"] ?? '');
Is equals to:
echo "My index value is: " . (isset($my_array["my_index"]) ? $my_array["my_index"] : '');
I use my own useful function, exst(), all time which automatically declares variables.
Your code will be -
$greeting = "Hello, " . exst($user_name, 'Visitor') . " from " . exst($user_location);
/**
* Function exst() - Checks if the variable has been set
* (copy/paste it in any place of your code)
*
* If the variable is set and not empty returns the variable (no transformation)
* If the variable is not set or empty, returns the $default value
*
* @param mixed $var
* @param mixed $default
*
* @return mixed
*/
function exst(& $var, $default = "")
{
$t = "";
if (!isset($var) || !$var) {
if (isset($default) && $default != "")
$t = $default;
}
else {
$t = $var;
}
if (is_string($t))
$t = trim($t);
return $t;
}
In a very simple language:
The mistake is you are using a variable$user_location
which is not defined by you earlier, and it doesn't have any value. So I recommend you to please declare this variable before using it. For example:
$user_location = '';
$user_location = 'Los Angles';
This is a very common error you can face. So don't worry; just declare the variable and enjoy coding.
Keep things simple:
<?php
error_reporting(E_ALL); // Making sure all notices are on
function idxVal(&$var, $default = null) {
return empty($var) ? $var = $default : $var;
}
echo idxVal($arr['test']); // Returns null without any notice
echo idxVal($arr['hey ho'], 'yo'); // Returns yo and assigns it to the array index. Nice
?>
An undefined index means in an array you requested for an unavailable array index. For example,
<?php
$newArray[] = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
print_r($newArray[5]);
?>
An undefined variable means you have used completely not an existing variable or which is not defined or initialized by that name. For example,
<?php print_r($myvar); ?>
An undefined offset means in an array you have asked for a nonexisting key. And the solution for this is to check before use:
php> echo array_key_exists(1, $myarray);
Regarding this part of the question:
Why do they appear all of a sudden? I used to use this script for years and I've never had any problem.
No definite answers but here are a some possible explanations of why settings can 'suddenly' change:
You have upgraded PHP to a newer version which can have other defaults for error_reporting, display_errors or other relevant settings.
You have removed or introduced some code (possibly in a dependency) that sets relevant settings at runtime usingini_set()
orerror_reporting()
(search for these in the code)
You changed the webserver configuration (assuming apache here):.htaccess
files and vhost configurations can also manipulate php settings.
Usually notices don't get displayed / reported (see PHP manual) so it is possible that when setting up the server, the php.ini file could not be loaded for some reason (file permissions??) and you were on the default settings. Later on, the 'bug' has been solved (by accident) and now it CAN load the correct php.ini file with the error_reporting set to show notices.
Using a ternary operator is simple, readable, and clean:
Assign a variable to the value of another variable if it's set, else assignnull
(or whatever default value you need):
$newVariable = isset($thePotentialData) ? $thePotentialData : null;
The same except using the null coalescing operator. There's no longer a need to callisset()
as this is built in, and no need to provide the variable to return as it's assumed to return the value of the variable being checked:
$newVariable = $thePotentialData ?? null;
Both will stop the Notices from the OP's question, and both are the exact equivalent of:
if (isset($thePotentialData)) {
$newVariable = $thePotentialData;
} else {
$newVariable = null;
}
If you don't require setting a new variable then you can directly use the ternary operator's returned value, such as withecho
, function arguments, etc.:
echo 'Your name is: ' . isset($name) ? $name : 'You did not provide one';
$foreName = getForeName(isset($userId) ? $userId : null);
function getForeName($userId)
{
if ($userId === null) {
// Etc
}
}
The above will work just the same with arrays, including sessions, etc., replacing the variable being checked with e.g.:
$_SESSION['checkMe']
Or however many levels deep you need, e.g.:
$clients['personal']['address']['postcode']
It is possible to suppress the PHP Notices with@
or reduce your error reporting level, but it does not fix the problem. It simply stops it being reported in the error log. This means that your code still tried to use a variable that was not set, which may or may not mean something doesn't work as intended - depending on how crucial the missing value is.
You should really be checking for this issue and handling it appropriately, either serving a different message, or even just returning a null value for everything else to identify the precise state.
If you just care about the Notice not being in the error log, then as an option you could simply ignore the error log.
If working with classes you need to make sure you reference member variables using$this
:
class Person
{
protected $firstName;
protected $lastName;
public function setFullName($first, $last)
{
// Correct
$this->firstName = $first;
// Incorrect
$lastName = $last;
// Incorrect
$this->$lastName = $last;
}
}
Another reason why an undefined index notice will be thrown, would be that a column was omitted from a database query.
I.e.:
$query = "SELECT col1 FROM table WHERE col_x = ?";
Then trying to access more columns/rows inside a loop.
I.e.:
print_r($row['col1']);
print_r($row['col2']); // undefined index thrown
or in awhile
loop:
while( $row = fetching_function($query) ) {
echo $row['col1'];
echo "<br>";
echo $row['col2']; // undefined index thrown
echo "<br>";
echo $row['col3']; // undefined index thrown
}
Something else that needs to be noted is that on a *NIX OS and Mac OS X, things are case-sensitive.
Consult the followning Q&A's on Stack:
One common cause of a variable not existing after an HTML form has been submitted is the form element is not contained within a<form>
tag:
Example: Element not contained within the<form>
<form action="example.php" method="post">
<p>
<input type="text" name="name" />
<input type="submit" value="Submit" />
</p>
</form>
<select name="choice">
<option value="choice1">choice 1</option>
<option value="choice2">choice 2</option>
<option value="choice3">choice 3</option>
<option value="choice4">choice 4</option>
</select>
Example: Element now contained within the<form>
<form action="example.php" method="post">
<select name="choice">
<option value="choice1">choice 1</option>
<option value="choice2">choice 2</option>
<option value="choice3">choice 3</option>
<option value="choice4">choice 4</option>
</select>
<p>
<input type="text" name="name" />
<input type="submit" value="Submit" />
</p>
</form>
These errors occur whenever we are using a variable that is not set.
The best way to deal with these is set error reporting on while development.
To set error reporting on:
ini_set('error_reporting', 'on');
ini_set('display_errors', 'on');
error_reporting(E_ALL);
On production servers, error reporting is off, therefore, we do not get these errors.
On the development server, however, we can set error reporting on.
To get rid of this error, we see the following example:
if ($my == 9) {
$test = 'yes'; // Will produce an error as $my is not 9.
}
echo $test;
We can initialize the variables toNULL
before assigning their values or using them.
So, we can modify the code as:
$test = NULL;
if ($my == 9) {
$test = 'yes'; // Will produce an error as $my is not 9.
}
echo $test;
This will not disturb any program logic and will not produce a Notice even if$test
does not have a value.
So, basically, it??�s always better to set error reporting ON for development.
And fix all the errors.
And on production, error reporting should be set to off.
I asked a question about this and I was referred to this post with the message:
This question already has an answer here:
???Notice: Undefined variable???, ???Notice: Undefined index???, and ???Notice: Undefined offset??? using PHP
I am sharing my question and solution here:
This is the error:
Line 154 is the problem. This is what I have in line 154:
153 foreach($cities as $key => $city){
154 if(($city != 'London') && ($city != 'Madrid') && ($citiesCounterArray[$key] >= 1)){
I think the problem is that I am writing if conditions for the variable$city
, which is not the key but the value in$key => $city
. First, could you confirm if that is the cause of the warning? Second, if that is the problem, why is it that I cannot write a condition based on the value? Does it have to be with the key that I need to write the condition?
UPDATE 1: The problem is that when executing$citiesCounterArray[$key]
, sometimes the$key
corresponds to a key that does not exist in the$citiesCounterArray
array, but that is not always the case based on the data of my loop. What I need is to set a condition so that if$key
exists in the array, then run the code, otherwise, skip it.
UPDATE 2: This is how I fixed it by usingarray_key_exists()
:
foreach($cities as $key => $city){
if(array_key_exists($key, $citiesCounterArray)){
if(($city != 'London') && ($city != 'Madrid') && ($citiesCounterArray[$key] >= 1)){
Probably you were using an old PHP version until and now upgraded PHP that??�s the reason it was working without any error till now from years.
Until PHP 4 there was no error if you are using variable without defining it but as of PHP?�5 onwards it throws errors for codes like mentioned in question.
If you are sending data to an API, simply use isset():
if(isset($_POST['param'])){
$param = $_POST['param'];
} else {
# Do something else
}
If it is an error is because of a session, make sure you have started the session properly.
Those notices are because you don't have the used variable{-code-1}
and{-code-2}
key was not present into{-code-3}
variable.
Those notices were triggered every time, because yourcode
is not correct, but probably you didn't have the reporting of notices on.
Solve the bugs:
$my_variable_name = "Variable name"; // defining variable
echo "My variable value is: " . $my_variable_name;
if(isset({-code-3}["{-code-2}"])){
echo "My index value is: " . {-code-3}["{-code-2}"]; // check if {-code-2} is set
}
Another way to get this out:
ini_set("error_reporting", false)
When dealing with files, a proper enctype and a POST method are required, which will trigger an undefined index notice if either are not included in the form.
The manual states the following basic syntax:
<!-- The data encoding type, enctype, MUST be specified as below -->
<form enctype="multipart/form-data" action="__URL__" method="POST">
<!-- MAX_FILE_SIZE must precede the file input field -->
<input type="hidden" name="MAX_FILE_SIZE" value="30000" />
<!-- Name of input element determines name in $_FILES array -->
Send this file: <input name="userfile" type="file" />
<input type="submit" value="Send File" />
</form>
<?php
// In PHP versions earlier than 4.1.0, $HTTP_POST_FILES should be used instead
// of $_FILES.
$uploaddir = '/var/www/uploads/';
$uploadfile = $uploaddir . basename($_FILES['userfile']['name']);
echo '<pre>';
if (move_uploaded_file($_FILES['userfile']['tmp_name'], $uploadfile)) {
echo "File is valid, and was successfully uploaded.\n";
} else {
echo "Possible file upload attack!\n";
}
echo 'Here is some more debugging info:';
print_r($_FILES);
print "</pre>";
?>
Reference:
In PHP you need first to define the variable. After that you can use it.
We can check if a variable is defined or not in a very efficient way!
// If you only want to check variable has value and value has true and false value.
// But variable must be defined first.
if($my_variable_name){
}
// If you want to check if the variable is defined or undefined
// Isset() does not check that variable has a true or false value
// But it checks the null value of a variable
if(isset($my_variable_name)){
}
// It will work with: true, false, and NULL
$defineVariable = false;
if($defineVariable){
echo "true";
}else{
echo "false";
}
// It will check if the variable is defined or not and if the variable has a null value.
if(isset($unDefineVariable)){
echo "true";
}else{
echo "false";
}
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PHP (from the English Hypertext Preprocessor - hypertext preprocessor) is a scripting programming language for developing web applications. Supported by most hosting providers, it is one of the most popular tools for creating dynamic websites.
The PHP scripting language has gained wide popularity due to its processing speed, simplicity, cross-platform, functionality and distribution of source codes under its own license.
https://www.php.net/
DBMS is a database management system. It is designed to change, search, add and delete information in the database. There are many DBMSs designed for similar purposes with different features. One of the most popular is MySQL.
It is a software tool designed to work with relational SQL databases. It is easy to learn even for site owners who are not professional programmers or administrators. MySQL DBMS also allows you to export and import data, which is convenient when moving large amounts of information.
https://www.mysql.com/
HTML (English "hyper text markup language" - hypertext markup language) is a special markup language that is used to create sites on the Internet.
Browsers understand html perfectly and can interpret it in an understandable way. In general, any page on the site is html-code, which the browser translates into a user-friendly form. By the way, the code of any page is available to everyone.
https://www.w3.org/html/
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