Backward Incompatible Changes

PHP Core

String to Number Comparison

Non-strict comparisons between numbers and non-numeric strings now work by casting the number to string and comparing the strings. Comparisons between numbers and numeric strings continue to work as before. Notably, this means that 0 == "not-a-number" is considered false now.

Comparison Before After
0 == "0" true true
0 == "0.0" true true
0 == "foo" true false
0 == "" true false
42 == " 42" true true
42 == "42foo" true false

Other incompatible Changes

  • match is now a reserved keyword.

  • mixed is now a reserved word, so it cannot be used to name a class, interface or trait, and is also prohibited from being used in namespaces.

  • Assertion failures now throw by default. If the old behavior is desired, assert.exception=0 can be set in the INI settings.

  • Methods with the same name as the class are no longer interpreted as constructors. The __construct() method should be used instead.

  • The ability to call non-static methods statically has been removed. Thus is_callable() will fail when checking for a non-static method with a classname (must check with an object instance).

  • The (real) and (unset) casts have been removed.

  • The track_errors ini directive has been removed. This means that php_errormsg is no longer available. The error_get_last() function may be used instead.

  • The ability to define case-insensitive constants has been removed. The third argument to define() may no longer be true.

  • The ability to specify an autoloader using an __autoload() function has been removed. spl_autoload_register() should be used instead.

  • The errcontext argument will no longer be passed to custom error handlers set with set_error_handler().

  • create_function() has been removed. Anonymous functions may be used instead.

  • each() has been removed. foreach or ArrayIterator should be used instead.

  • The ability to unbind this from closures that were created from a method, using Closure::fromCallable() or ReflectionMethod::getClosure(), has been removed.

  • The ability to unbind this from proper closures that contain uses of this has also been removed.

  • The ability to use array_key_exists() with objects has been removed. isset() or property_exists() may be used instead.

  • The behavior of array_key_exists() regarding the type of the key parameter has been made consistent with isset() and normal array access. All key types now use the usual coercions and array/object keys throw a TypeError.

  • Any array that has a number n as its first numeric key will use n+1 for its next implicit key, even if n is negative.

  • The default error_reporting level is now E_ALL. Previously it excluded E_NOTICE and E_DEPRECATED.

  • display_startup_errors is now enabled by default.

  • Using parent inside a class that has no parent will now result in a fatal compile-time error.

  • The @ operator will no longer silence fatal errors (E_ERROR, E_CORE_ERROR, E_COMPILE_ERROR, E_USER_ERROR, E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR, E_PARSE). Error handlers that expect error_reporting to be 0 when @ is used, should be adjusted to use a mask check instead:

    <?php
    // Replace
    function my_error_handler($err_no, $err_msg, $filename, $linenum) {
    if (
    error_reporting() == 0) {
    return
    false;
    }
    // ...
    }

    // With
    function my_error_handler($err_no, $err_msg, $filename, $linenum) {
    if (!(
    error_reporting() & $err_no)) {
    return
    false;
    }
    // ...
    }
    ?>

    Additionally, care should be taken that error messages are not displayed in production environments, which can result in information leaks. Please ensure that display_errors=Off is used in conjunction with error logging.

  • #[ is no longer interpreted as the start of a comment, as this syntax is now used for attributes.

  • Inheritance errors due to incompatible method signatures (LSP violations) will now always generate a fatal error. Previously a warning was generated in some cases.

  • The precedence of the concatenation operator has changed relative to bitshifts and addition as well as subtraction.

    <?php
    echo "Sum: " . $a + $b;
    // was previously interpreted as:
    echo ("Sum: " . $a) + $b;
    // is now interpreted as:
    echo "Sum:" . ($a + $b);
    ?>

  • Arguments with a default value that resolves to null at runtime will no longer implicitly mark the argument type as nullable. Either an explicit nullable type, or an explicit null default value has to be used instead.

    <?php
    // Replace
    function test(int $arg = CONST_RESOLVING_TO_NULL) {}
    // With
    function test(?int $arg = CONST_RESOLVING_TO_NULL) {}
    // Or
    function test(int $arg = null) {}
    ?>

  • A number of warnings have been converted into Error exceptions:

    • Attempting to write to a property of a non-object. Previously this implicitly created an stdClass object for null, false and empty strings.
    • Attempting to append an element to an array for which the PHP_INT_MAX key is already used.
    • Attempting to use an invalid type (array or object) as an array key or string offset.
    • Attempting to write to an array index of a scalar value.
    • Attempting to unpack a non-array/Traversable.
    • Attempting to access unqualified constants which are undefined. Previously, unqualified constant accesses resulted in a warning and were interpreted as strings.
    • Passing the wrong number of arguments to a non-variadic built-in function will throw an ArgumentCountError.

    A number of notices have been converted into warnings:

    • Attempting to read an undefined variable.
    • Attempting to read an undefined property.
    • Attempting to read an undefined array key.
    • Attempting to read a property of a non-object.
    • Attempting to access an array index of a non-array.
    • Attempting to convert an array to string.
    • Attempting to use a resource as an array key.
    • Attempting to use null, a boolean, or a float as a string offset.
    • Attempting to read an out-of-bounds string offset.
    • Attempting to assign an empty string to a string offset.

  • Attempting to assign multiple bytes to a string offset will now emit a warning.

  • Unexpected characters in source files (such as NUL bytes outside of strings) will now result in a ParseError exception instead of a compile warning.

  • Uncaught exceptions now go through "clean shutdown", which means that destructors will be called after an uncaught exception.

  • The compile time fatal error "Only variables can be passed by reference" has been delayed until runtime, and converted into an "Argument cannot be passed by reference" Error exception.

  • Some "Only variables should be passed by reference" notices have been converted to "Argument cannot be passed by reference" exception.

  • The generated name for anonymous classes has changed. It will now include the name of the first parent or interface:

    <?php
    new class extends ParentClass {};
    // -> ParentClass@anonymous
    new class implements FirstInterface, SecondInterface {};
    // -> FirstInterface@anonymous
    new class {};
    // -> class@anonymous
    ?>

    The name shown above is still followed by a NUL byte and a unique suffix.

  • Non-absolute trait method references in trait alias adaptations are now required to be unambiguous:

    <?php
    class X {
    use
    T1, T2 {
    func as otherFunc;
    }
    function
    func() {}
    }
    ?>

    If both T1::func() and T2::func() exist, this code was previously silently accepted, and func was assumed to refer to T1::func. Now it will generate a fatal error instead, and either T1::func or T2::func needs to be written explicitly.

  • The signature of abstract methods defined in traits is now checked against the implementing class method:

    <?php
    trait MyTrait {
    abstract private function
    neededByTrait(): string;
    }

    class
    MyClass {
    use
    MyTrait;

    // Error, because of return type mismatch.
    private function neededByTrait(): int { return 42; }
    }
    ?>

  • Disabled functions are now treated exactly like non-existent functions. Calling a disabled function will report it as unknown, and redefining a disabled function is now possible.

  • data:// stream wrappers are no longer writable, which matches the documented behavior.

  • The arithmetic and bitwise operators +, -, *, /, **, %, <<, >>, &, |, ^, ~, ++, -- will now consistently throw a TypeError when one of the operands is an array, resource or non-overloaded object. The only exception to this is the array + array merge operation, which remains supported.

  • Float to string casting will now always behave locale-independently.

    <?php
    setlocale
    (LC_ALL, "de_DE");
    $f = 3.14;
    echo
    $f, "\n";
    // Previously: 3,14
    // Now: 3.14
    ?>

    See printf(), number_format() and NumberFormatter() for ways to customize number formatting.

  • Support for deprecated curly braces for offset access has been removed.

    <?php
    // Instead of:
    $array{0};
    $array{"key"};
    // Write:
    $array[0];
    $array["key"];
    ?>

  • Applying the final modifier on a private method will now produce a warning unless that method is the constructor.

  • If an object constructor exit()s, the object destructor will no longer be called. This matches the behavior when the constructor throws.

  • Namespaced names can no longer contain whitespace: While Foo\Bar will be recognized as a namespaced name, Foo \ Bar will not. Conversely, reserved keywords are now permitted as namespace segments, which may also change the interpretation of code: new\x is now the same as constant('new\x'), not new \x().

  • Nested ternaries now require explicit parentheses.

  • debug_backtrace() and Exception::getTrace() will no longer provide references to arguments. It will not be possible to change function arguments through the backtrace.

  • Numeric string handling has been altered to be more intuitive and less error-prone. Trailing whitespace is now allowed in numeric strings for consistency with how leading whitespace is treated. This mostly affects:

    • The is_numeric() function
    • String-to-string comparisons
    • Type declarations
    • Increment and decrement operations

    The concept of a "leading-numeric string" has been mostly dropped; the cases where this remains exist in order to ease migration. Strings which emitted an E_NOTICE "A non well-formed numeric value encountered" will now emit an E_WARNING "A non-numeric value encountered" and all strings which emitted an E_WARNING "A non-numeric value encountered" will now throw a TypeError. This mostly affects:

    • Arithmetic operations
    • Bitwise operations

    This E_WARNING to TypeError change also affects the E_WARNING "Illegal string offset 'string'" for illegal string offsets. The behavior of explicit casts to int/float from strings has not been changed.

  • Magic Methods will now have their arguments and return types checked if they have them declared. The signatures should match the following list:

    • __call(string $name, array $arguments): mixed
    • __callStatic(string $name, array $arguments): mixed
    • __clone(): void
    • __debugInfo(): ?array
    • __get(string $name): mixed
    • __invoke(mixed $arguments): mixed
    • __isset(string $name): bool
    • __serialize(): array
    • __set(string $name, mixed $value): void
    • __set_state(array $properties): object
    • __sleep(): array
    • __unserialize(array $data): void
    • __unset(string $name): void
    • __wakeup(): void

  • call_user_func_array() array keys will now be interpreted as parameter names, instead of being silently ignored.

  • Declaring a function called assert() inside a namespace is no longer allowed, and issues E_COMPILE_ERROR. The assert() function is subject to special handling by the engine, which may lead to inconsistent behavior when defining a namespaced function with the same name.

Resource to Object Migration

Several resources have been migrated to objects. Return value checks using is_resource() should be replaced with checks for false.

COM and .Net (Windows)

The ability to import case-insensitive constants from type libraries has been removed. The second argument to com_load_typelib() may no longer be false; com.autoregister_casesensitive may no longer be disabled; case-insensitive markers in com.typelib_file are ignored.

CURL

CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS no longer accepts objects as arrays. To interpret an object as an array, perform an explicit (array) cast. The same applies to other options accepting arrays as well.

Date and Time

mktime() and gmmktime() now require at least one argument. time() can be used to get the current timestamp.

DOM

Unimplemented classes from the DOM extension that had no behavior and contained test data have been removed. These classes have also been removed in the latest version of the DOM standard:

  • DOMNameList
  • DomImplementationList
  • DOMConfiguration
  • DomError
  • DomErrorHandler
  • DOMImplementationSource
  • DOMLocator
  • DOMUserDataHandler
  • DOMTypeInfo
  • DOMStringExtend

Unimplemented methods from the DOM extension that had no behavior have been removed:

  • DOMNamedNodeMap::setNamedItem()
  • DOMNamedNodeMap::removeNamedItem()
  • DOMNamedNodeMap::setNamedItemNS()
  • DOMNamedNodeMap::removeNamedItemNS()
  • DOMText::replaceWholeText()
  • DOMNode::compareDocumentPosition()
  • DOMNode::isEqualNode()
  • DOMNode::getFeature()
  • DOMNode::setUserData()
  • DOMNode::getUserData()
  • DOMDocument::renameNode()

Enchant

Exif

read_exif_data() has been removed; exif_read_data() should be used instead.

Filter

  • The FILTER_FLAG_SCHEME_REQUIRED and FILTER_FLAG_HOST_REQUIRED flags for the FILTER_VALIDATE_URL filter have been removed. The scheme and host are (and have been) always required.

  • The INPUT_REQUEST and INPUT_SESSION source for filter_input() etc. have been removed. These were never implemented and their use always generated a warning.

GD

  • The deprecated function image2wbmp() has been removed.

  • The deprecated functions png2wbmp() and jpeg2wbmp() have been removed.

  • The default mode parameter of imagecropauto() no longer accepts -1. IMG_CROP_DEFAULT should be used instead.

  • On Windows, php_gd2.dll has been renamed to php_gd.dll.

GMP

gmp_random() has been removed. One of gmp_random_range() or gmp_random_bits() should be used instead.

Iconv

iconv implementations which do not properly set errno in case of errors are no longer supported.

IMAP

Internationalization Functions

  • The deprecated constant INTL_IDNA_VARIANT_2003 has been removed.

  • The deprecated Normalizer::NONE constant has been removed.

LDAP

MBString

OCI8

  • The OCI-Lob class is now called OCILob, and the OCI-Collection class is now called OCICollection for name compliance enforced by PHP 8 arginfo type annotation tooling.

  • Several alias functions have been marked as deprecated.

  • oci_internal_debug() and its alias ociinternaldebug() have been removed.

ODBC

OpenSSL

Regular Expressions (Perl-Compatible)

When passing invalid escape sequences they are no longer interpreted as literals. This behavior previously required the X modifier – which is now ignored.

PHP Data Objects

  • The default error handling mode has been changed from "silent" to "exceptions". See Errors and error handling for details.

  • The signatures of some PDO methods have changed:

    • PDO::query(string $query, ?int $fetchMode = null, mixed ...$fetchModeArgs)
    • PDOStatement::setFetchMode(int $mode, mixed ...$args)

PDO ODBC

The php.ini directive pdo_odbc.db2_instance_name has been removed.

PDO MySQL

PDO::inTransaction() now reports the actual transaction state of the connection, rather than an approximation maintained by PDO. If a query that is subject to "implicit commit" is executed, PDO::inTransaction() will subsequently return false, as a transaction is no longer active.

PostgreSQL

  • The deprecated pg_connect() syntax using multiple parameters instead of a connection string is no longer supported.

  • The deprecated pg_lo_import() and pg_lo_export() signature that passes the connection as the last argument is no longer supported. The connection should be passed as first argument instead.

  • pg_fetch_all() will now return an empty array instead of false for result sets with zero rows.

Phar

Metadata associated with a phar will no longer be automatically unserialized, to fix potential security vulnerabilities due to object instantiation, autoloading, etc.

Reflection

  • The method signatures

    • ReflectionClass::newInstance($args)
    • ReflectionFunction::invoke($args)
    • ReflectionMethod::invoke($object, $args)

    have been changed to:

    • ReflectionClass::newInstance(...$args)
    • ReflectionFunction::invoke(...$args)
    • ReflectionMethod::invoke($object, ...$args)

    Code that must be compatible with both PHP 7 and PHP 8 can use the following signatures to be compatible with both versions:

    • ReflectionClass::newInstance($arg = null, ...$args)
    • ReflectionFunction::invoke($arg = null, ...$args)
    • ReflectionMethod::invoke($object, $arg = null, ...$args)

  • The ReflectionType::__toString() method will now return a complete debug representation of the type, and is no longer deprecated. In particular the result will include a nullability indicator for nullable types. The format of the return value is not stable and may change between PHP versions.

  • Reflection export() methods have been removed. Instead reflection objects can be cast to string.

  • ReflectionMethod::isConstructor() and ReflectionMethod::isDestructor() now also return true for __construct() and __destruct() methods of interfaces. Previously, this would only be true for methods of classes and traits.

  • ReflectionType::isBuiltin() method has been moved to ReflectionNamedType. ReflectionUnionType does not have it.

Sockets

  • The deprecated AI_IDN_ALLOW_UNASSIGNED and AI_IDN_USE_STD3_ASCII_RULES flags for socket_addrinfo_lookup() have been removed.

Standard PHP Library (SPL)

Standard Library

  • assert() will no longer evaluate string arguments, instead they will be treated like any other argument. assert($a == $b) should be used instead of assert('$a == $b'). The assert.quiet_eval ini directive and the ASSERT_QUIET_EVAL constant have also been removed, as they would no longer have any effect.

  • parse_str() can no longer be used without specifying a result array.

  • The string.strip_tags filter has been removed.

  • The needle argument of strpos(), strrpos(), stripos(), strripos(), strstr(), strchr(), strrchr(), and stristr() will now always be interpreted as a string. Previously non-string needles were interpreted as an ASCII code point. An explicit call to chr() can be used to restore the previous behavior.

  • The needle argument for strpos(), strrpos(), stripos(), strripos(), strstr(), stristr() and strrchr() can now be empty.

  • The length argument for substr(), substr_count(), substr_compare(), and iconv_substr() can now be null. null values will behave as if no length argument was provided and will therefore return the remainder of the string instead of an empty string.

  • The length argument for array_splice() can now be null. null values will behave identically to omitting the argument, thus removing everything from the offset to the end of the array.

  • The args argument of vsprintf(), vfprintf(), and vprintf() must now be an array. Previously any type was accepted.

  • The 'salt' option of password_hash() is no longer supported. If the 'salt' option is used a warning is generated, the provided salt is ignored, and a generated salt is used instead.

  • The quotemeta() function will now return an empty string if an empty string was passed. Previously false was returned.

  • The following functions have been removed:

  • FILTER_SANITIZE_MAGIC_QUOTES has been removed.

  • Calling implode() with parameters in a reverse order ($pieces, $glue) is no longer supported.

  • parse_url() will now distinguish absent and empty queries and fragments:

    • http://example.com/foo → query = null, fragment = null
    • http://example.com/foo? → query = "", fragment = null
    • http://example.com/foo# → query = null, fragment = ""
    • http://example.com/foo?# → query = "", fragment = ""
    Previously all cases resulted in query and fragment being null.

  • var_dump() and debug_zval_dump() will now print floating-point numbers using serialize_precision rather than precision. In a default configuration, this means that floating-point numbers are now printed with full accuracy by these debugging functions.

  • If the array returned by __sleep() contains non-existing properties, these are now silently ignored. Previously, such properties would have been serialized as if they had the value null.

  • The default locale on startup is now always "C". No locales are inherited from the environment by default. Previously, LC_ALL was set to "C", while LC_CTYPE was inherited from the environment. However, some functions did not respect the inherited locale without an explicit setlocale() call. An explicit setlocale() call is now always required if a locale component should be changed from the default.

  • The deprecated DES fallback in crypt() has been removed. If an unknown salt format is passed to crypt(), the function will fail with *0 instead of falling back to a weak DES hash now.

  • Specifying out of range rounds for SHA256/SHA512 crypt() will now fail with *0 instead of clamping to the closest limit. This matches glibc behavior.

  • The result of sorting functions may have changed, if the array contains elements that compare as equal.

  • Any functions accepting callbacks that are not explicitly specified to accept parameters by reference will now warn if a callback with reference parameters is used. Examples include array_filter() and array_reduce(). This was already the case for most, but not all, functions previously.

  • The HTTP stream wrapper as used by functions like file_get_contents() now advertises HTTP/1.1 rather than HTTP/1.0 by default. This does not change the behavior of the client, but may cause servers to respond differently. To retain the old behavior, set the 'protocol_version' stream context option, e.g.

    <?php
    $ctx
    = stream_context_create(['http' => ['protocol_version' => '1.0']]);
    echo
    file_get_contents('http://example.org', false, $ctx);
    ?>

  • Calling crypt() without an explicit salt is no longer supported. If you would like to produce a strong hash with an auto-generated salt, use password_hash() instead.

  • substr(), mb_substr(), iconv_substr() and grapheme_substr() now consistently clamp out-of-bounds offsets to the string boundary. Previously, false was returned instead of the empty string in some cases.

  • On Windows, the program execution functions (proc_open(), exec(), popen() etc.) using the shell, now consistently execute %comspec% /s /c "$commandline", which has the same effect as executing $commandline (without additional quotes).

Sysvsem

  • The auto_release parameter of sem_get() was changed to accept bool values rather than int.

Tidy

Tokenizer

  • T_COMMENT tokens will no longer include a trailing newline. The newline will instead be part of a following T_WHITESPACE token. It should be noted that T_COMMENT is not always followed by whitespace, it may also be followed by T_CLOSE_TAG or end-of-file.

  • Namespaced names are now represented using the T_NAME_QUALIFIED (Foo\Bar), T_NAME_FULLY_QUALIFIED (\Foo\Bar) and T_NAME_RELATIVE (namespace\Foo\Bar) tokens. T_NS_SEPARATOR is only used for standalone namespace separators, and only syntactially valid in conjunction with group use declarations.

XMLReader

XMLReader::open() and XMLReader::xml() are now static methods. They can still be called as instance methods, but inheriting classes need to declare them as static if they override these methods.

XML-RPC

The XML-RPC extension has been moved to PECL and is no longer part of the PHP distribution.

Zip

ZipArchive::OPSYS_Z_CPM has been removed (this name was a typo). Use ZipArchive::OPSYS_CPM instead.

Zlib

Windows PHP Test Packs

The test runner has been renamed from run-test.php to run-tests.php, to match its name in php-src.

add a note add a note

User Contributed Notes 3 notes

up
18
retry, abort, fail
2 years ago
The change in string to int comparison mentioned above (e.g. '' == 0 now equates to false) has some other nasty consequences:

$a = '';

// php 8

if ( $a < 0 ) echo 'true'; // echos true
if ( $a < -1) echo 'true'; // echos true
if ( $a < -100 ) echo 'true'; // echos true

// php 7

if ( $a < 0 ) echo 'true'; // no output
if ( $a < -1) echo 'true'; // no output
if ( $a < -100 ) echo 'true'; // no output

So in a situation where you may have a web form input and expected an empty value to equate to 0, watch out not only for == 0, != 0, and <= 0 comparisons, but ALL < or <= comparisons to negative integers.
up
2
aphpguy at galaxy dot za dot net
1 year ago
If you have older projects that break with PHP7 to 8 migration due to the loose comparison issue:

i.e. if ($a == 0) different behaviour between PHP 7 and PHP 8
(for case like $a = "" or $a = "123foo" and other cases listed at top)

replace in old code:

if ($a == 0) { .. } 

with

if (cmp_eq($a, $b)) { .. }

Tested with a wide range of scenarios, even against arrays, booleans, file handles, pipe handles, objects, scalars and numbers.

So old code still behave like before. 
Then both PHP8.x and older PHP up to ver 7.x will give the exact same boolean true or false output for loose comparisons.

function cmp_eq($a, $b) {
// If both $a and $b are of type strings, compare them as strings
if (is_string($a) && is_string($b)) { return $a == $b; } // may not be === because php says '42' equals '042' true yet '42' === '042' is false.

// If both $a and $b are numeric strings, compare them as numbers
if (is_numeric($a) && is_numeric($b)) { return $a == $b; }

// If $a is an empty string and $b is 0, or vice versa, return true
if (($a === '' && $b === 0) || ($a === 0 && $b === '')) { return true; }

// If $a is a non-numeric string and $b is 0, or vice versa, return true
if ((is_string($a) && ($a !== '') && ($b === 0)) || (($a === 0) && is_string($b) && ($b !== ''))) {
return true;
}
// special case '123abc' == 123 .. php 7 casts 123abc to 123, then 123 == 123 results in true. lets mimic that.
if ((is_string($a) && ($a !== '') && (is_numeric($b)) && ((bool)$b))) {
$number = filter_var($a, FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_FLOAT, FILTER_FLAG_ALLOW_FRACTION); //"-234.56xyz"
return $number == $b;
}
if (is_numeric($a) && ((bool)$a) && is_string($b) && ($b !== '')) {
$number = filter_var($b, FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_FLOAT, FILTER_FLAG_ALLOW_FRACTION); //"-234.56xyz"
return $a == $number;
}

// If $a is a number and $b is a non-numeric string, cast $a to string and compare
if (is_numeric($a) && is_string($b)) { return strval($a) == $b; }

// If $b is a number and $a is a non-numeric string, cast $b to string and compare
if (is_string($a) && is_numeric($b)) { return $a == strval($b); }

// If $a and $b are both non-numeric strings, compare them directly, we should return true if they are the same
return $a == $b;
} // end func cmp_eq

Note: the better way would be to port code to PHP 8, use strict variable typing and rather make use of the === and !== operators.

But in some cases having lots of old code to quickly patch, this might help.
up
-3
1035041238 at qq dot com
1 year ago
In PHP 8, an empty string is less than any number, an English letter is always bigger than any number.

More interesting are the punctuation marks and non-word characters, some bigger than numbers, some smaller than numbers

$string = '`~!@#$%^&*()-_=+[]{};:\'"\\|,.<>/?';

$number = 999999999999;

$str_len = strlen($string);

$bigger = $smaller = $equal = [];
for ( $i = 0; $i < $str_len; ++$i ) {
    if ( $string[$i] > $number ) {
        $bigger[] = $string[$i];
    } elseif ( $string[$i] < $number ) {
        $smaller[] = $string[$i];
    } else {
        $equal[] = $string[$i];
    }
}

var_dump( $bigger ); //['`', '~', '@', '^', '_', '=', '[', ']', '{', '}', ';', ':', '\', '|', '<', '>', '?']
var_dump( $smaller); //['!', '#', '$', '%', '&', '*', '(', ')', '-', '+', ''', '"', ',', '.', '/']
var_dump( $equal); //[]
To Top