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PHP – Special Types



PHP’s two data types – resource and NULL – are classified as special types. An object of resource type refers to external resources like database connection, file streams etc. On the other hand, a NULL data type is a variable without any data assigned to it. In this chapter, we shall learn more about these types.

Resource Type

A PHP program often needs to interact with an external environment such as a database, or a disk file etc. These are treated as resources in PHP. Resource is a special data type that refers to any such external resource. PHP uses relevant functions to create these resources. For example, fopen() function opens a disk file and its reference is stored in a resource variable.

PHP's Zend engine uses reference counting system. Hence, a resource with zero reference count is destroyed automatically by garbage collector and the memory used by resource data type need not be freed manually.

Different built-in PHP functions return respective resource variables. Subsequently, PHP uses them for interacting with the corresponding external environment. For example, the fopen() function returns a file resource, which acts as a file handle and the read/write operations on the file are facilitated by this resource variable.

The following table summarizes different functions that return resource variables −

Resource Type Built-in functions Definition
Produced Sold
bzip2 bzopen() bzclose() Bzip2 file
curl curl_init() curl_close() Curl session
ftp ftp_connect(), ftp_close() FTP stream
mssql link mssql_connect() mssql_close() Link to Microsoft SQL Server database
mysql link mysql_connect() mysql_close() Link to MySQL database
mysql result mysql_db_query(), mysql_free_result() MySQL result
oci8 connection oci_connect() oci_close() Connection to Oracle Database
ODBC link odbc_connect() odbc_close() Link to ODBC database
pdf document pdf_new() pdf_close() PDF document
stream opendir() closedir() Dir handle
stream fopen(), tmpfile() fclose() File handle
socket socket_create() Socket_close() Socket handle
xml xml_parser_create() xml_parser_free() XML parser
zlib gzopen() gzclose() gz-compressed file
zlib.deflate deflate_init() None() incremental deflate context
zlib.inflate inflate_init() None() incremental inflate context

PHP has get_resource_type() function that returns resource type of a variable.

get_resource_type ( resource $handle ) : string

where $handle is the resource variable whose type is to be obtained. This function returns a string corresponding to resource type.

There is also get_resource_id() function an integer identifier for the given resource.

get_resource_id(resource $resource): int

Example

This function provides a type-safe way for generating the integer identifier for a given resource.

<?php
   $fp = fopen("hello.php", "r");
   $resource = get_resource_type($fp);
   $id = get_resource_id($fp);
   echo "The resource type is : $resource The resource ID is : $id";
?>

It will produce the following output

The resource type is : stream The resource ID is : 5

NULL type

In PHP, a variable with no value is said to be of null data type. Such a variable has a value defined as NULL. A variable can be explicitly assigned NULL or its value been set to null by using unset() function.

$var=NULL;

It is possible to cast variable of other type to null, although casting null to other type has been deprecated from PHP 7.2. In earlier versions, casting was done using (unset)$var syntax

Example

The following example shows how to assign NULL to a variable

<?php
   $var=NULL;
   var_dump($var);
?>

It will produce the following output

NULL

Example

The following example performs null variable to other primary variables −

<?php
   $var = NULL;
   var_dump( (int)   $var);
   var_dump((float)$var);
   var_dump((bool)  $var) ;
   var_dump( (boolean) $var);
?>

It will produce the following output

int(0)
float(0)
bool(false)
bool(false)
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