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问题:
Is there a way to test a range without doing this redundant code:
if ($int>$min && $int<$max)
?
Like a function:
function testRange($int,$min,$max){
return ($min<$int && $int<$max);
}
usage:
if (testRange($int,$min,$max))
?
Does PHP have such built-in function? Or any other way to do it?
回答1:
I don't think you'll get a better way than your function.
It is clean, easy to follow and understand, and returns the result of the condition (no return (...) ? true : false
mess).
回答2:
Tested your 3 ways with a 1000000-times-loop.
t1_test1: ($val >= $min && $val <= $max)
: 0.3823 ms
t2_test2: (in_array($val, range($min, $max))
: 9.3301 ms
t3_test3: (max(min($var, $max), $min) == $val)
: 0.7272 ms
T1 was fastest, it was basicly this:
function t1($val, $min, $max) {
return ($val >= $min && $val <= $max);
}
回答3:
There is no builtin function, but you can easily achieve it by calling the functions min()
and max()
appropriately.
// Limit integer between 1 and 100000
$var = max(min($var, 100000), 1);
回答4:
Most of the given examples assume that for the test range [$a..$b], $a <= $b, i.e. the range extremes are in lower - higher order and most assume that all are integer numbers.
But I needed a function to test if $n was between $a and $b, as described here:
Check if $n is between $a and $b even if:
$a < $b
$a > $b
$a = $b
All numbers can be real, not only integer.
There is an easy way to test.
I base the test it in the fact that ($n-$a)
and ($n-$b)
have different signs when $n is between $a and $b, and the same sign when $n is outside the $a..$b range.
This function is valid for testing increasing, decreasing, positive and negative numbers, not limited to test only integer numbers.
function between($n, $a, $b)
{
return (($a==$n)&&($b==$n))? true : ($n-$a)*($n-$b)<0;
}
回答5:
I'm not able to comment (not enough reputation) so I'll amend Luis Rosety's answer here:
function between($n, $a, $b) {
return ($n-$a)*($n-$b) <= 0;
}
This function works also in cases where n == a or n == b.
Proof:
Let n belong to range [a,b], where [a,b] is a subset of real numbers.
Now a <= n <= b. Then n-a >= 0 and n-b <= 0. That means that (n-a)*(n-b) <= 0.
Case b <= n <= a works similarly.
回答6:
There's filter_var()
as well and it's the native function which checks range. It doesn't give exactly what you want (never returns true), but with "cheat" we can change it.
I don't think it's a good code as for readability, but I show it's as a possibility:
return (filter_var($someNumber, FILTER_VALIDATE_INT, ['options' => ['min_range' => $min, 'max_range' => $max]]) !== false)
Just fill $someNumber
, $min
and $max
. filter_var
with that filter returns either boolean false when number is outside range or the number itself when it's within range. The expression (!== false
) makes function return true, when number is within range.
If you want to shorten it somehow, remember about type casting. If you would use !=
it would be false for number 0 within range -5; +5 (while it should be true). The same would happen if you would use type casting ((bool)
).
// EXAMPLE OF WRONG USE, GIVES WRONG RESULTS WITH "0"
(bool)filter_var($someNumber, FILTER_VALIDATE_INT, ['options' => ['min_range' => $min, 'max_range' => $max]])
if (filter_var($someNumber, FILTER_VALIDATE_INT, ['options' => ['min_range' => $min, 'max_range' => $max]])) ...
Imagine that (from other answer):
if(in_array($userScore, range(-5, 5))) echo 'your score is correct'; else echo 'incorrect, enter again';
If user would write empty value ($userScore = ''
) it would be correct, as in_array
is set here for default, non-strict more and that means that range creates 0
as well, and '' == 0
(non-strict), but '' !== 0
(if you would use strict mode). It's easy to miss such things and that's why I wrote a bit about that. I was learned that strict operators are default, and programmer could use non-strict only in special cases. I think it's a good lesson. Most examples here would fail in some cases because non-strict checking.
Still I like filter_var and you can use above (or below if I'd got so "upped" ;)) functions and make your own callback which you would use as FILTER_CALLBACK
filter. You could return bool or even add openRange
parameter. And other good point: you can use other functions, e.g. checking range of every number of array or POST/GET values. That's really powerful tool.
回答7:
Using comparison operators is way, way faster than calling any function. I'm not 100% sure if this exists, but I think it doesn't.
回答8:
You could do it using in_array()
combined with range()
if (in_array($value, range($min, $max))) {
// Value is in range
}
Note As has been pointed out in the comments however, this is not exactly a great solution if you are focussed on performance. Generating an array (escpecially with larger ranges) will slow down the execution.