(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
is_string — Find whether the type of a variable is string
value
The variable being evaluated.
Example #1 is_string() example
<?php
$values = array(false, true, null, 'abc', '23', 23, '23.5', 23.5, '', ' ', '0', 0);
foreach ($values as $value) {
echo "is_string(";
var_export($value);
echo ") = ";
echo var_dump(is_string($value));
}
?>
The above example will output:
is_string(false) = bool(false) is_string(true) = bool(false) is_string(NULL) = bool(false) is_string('abc') = bool(true) is_string('23') = bool(true) is_string(23) = bool(false) is_string('23.5') = bool(true) is_string(23.5) = bool(false) is_string('') = bool(true) is_string(' ') = bool(true) is_string('0') = bool(true) is_string(0) = bool(false)
Using is_string() on an object will always return false (even with __toString()).
<?php
class B {
public function __toString() {
return "Instances of B() can be treated as a strings!\n";
}
}
$b = new B();
print($b); //Instances of B() can be treated as a strings!
print(is_string($b) ? 'true' : 'false'); //false
?>
As noted earlier, is_string() returns false on an object that has a __toString() method. Here is a simple way to do a check that will work:
<?php
// determine if the passed argument can be treated like a string.
function is_stringy($text) {
return (is_string($text) || (is_object($text) && method_exists($text, '__toString' ));
}