PHP 8.4.0 RC4 available for testing

is_int

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

is_intPrüft, ob eine Variable vom Typ int ist

Beschreibung

is_int(mixed $value): bool

Prüft, ob eine Variable vom Typ integer ist.

Hinweis:

Um zu testen, ob eine Variable eine Zahl oder eine numerische Zeichenkette ist (wie zum Beispiel Formularangaben, die immer Zeichenketten sind), müssen Sie is_numeric() verwenden.

Parameter-Liste

value

Die auszuwertende Variable.

Rückgabewerte

Gibt true zurück, wenn value vom Typ int ist, sonst false.

Beispiele

Beispiel #1 is_int()-Beispiel

<?php
$values
= array(23, "23", 23.5, "23.5", null, true, false);
foreach (
$values as $value) {
echo
"is_int(";
var_export($value);
echo
") = ";
var_dump(is_int($value));
}
?>

Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt folgende Ausgabe:

is_int(23) = bool(true)
is_int('23') = bool(false)
is_int(23.5) = bool(false)
is_int('23.5') = bool(false)
is_int(NULL) = bool(false)
is_int(true) = bool(false)
is_int(false) = bool(false)

Siehe auch

  • is_bool() - Prüft, ob eine Variable vom Typ boolean ist
  • is_float() - Prüft, ob eine Variable vom Typ float ist
  • is_numeric() - Prüft, ob eine Variable eine Zahl oder ein numerischer String ist
  • is_string() - Prüft, ob Variable vom Typ string ist
  • is_array() - Prüft, ob die Variable ein Array ist
  • is_object() - Prüft, ob eine Variable vom Typ object ist

add a note

User Contributed Notes 11 notes

up
165
Simon Neaves
16 years ago
I've found that both that is_int and ctype_digit don't behave quite as I'd expect, so I made a simple function called isInteger which does. I hope somebody finds it useful.

<?php
function isInteger($input){
return(
ctype_digit(strval($input)));
}

var_dump(is_int(23)); //bool(true)
var_dump(is_int("23")); //bool(false)
var_dump(is_int(23.5)); //bool(false)
var_dump(is_int(NULL)); //bool(false)
var_dump(is_int("")); //bool(false)

var_dump(ctype_digit(23)); //bool(true)
var_dump(ctype_digit("23")); //bool(false)
var_dump(ctype_digit(23.5)); //bool(false)
var_dump(ctype_digit(NULL)); //bool(false)
var_dump(ctype_digit("")); //bool(true)

var_dump(isInteger(23)); //bool(true)
var_dump(isInteger("23")); //bool(true)
var_dump(isInteger(23.5)); //bool(false)
var_dump(isInteger(NULL)); //bool(false)
var_dump(isInteger("")); //bool(false)
?>
up
32
Robin
14 years ago
Keep in mind that is_int() operates in signed fashion, not unsigned, and is limited to the word size of the environment php is running in.

In a 32-bit environment:

<?php
is_int
( 2147483647 ); // true
is_int( 2147483648 ); // false
is_int( 9223372036854775807 ); // false
is_int( 9223372036854775808 ); // false
?>

In a 64-bit environment:

<?php
is_int
( 2147483647 ); // true
is_int( 2147483648 ); // true
is_int( 9223372036854775807 ); // true
is_int( 9223372036854775808 ); // false
?>

If you find yourself deployed in a 32-bit environment where you are required to deal with numeric confirmation of integers (and integers only) potentially breaching the 32-bit span, you can combine is_int() with is_float() to guarantee a cover of the full, signed 64-bit span:

<?php
$small
= 2147483647; // will always be true for is_int(), but never for is_float()
$big = 9223372036854775807; // will only be true for is_int() in a 64-bit environment

if( is_int($small) || is_float($small) ); // passes in a 32-bit environment
if( is_int($big) || is_float($big) ); // passes in a 32-bit environment
?>
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35
e dot sand at elisand dot com
15 years ago
Simon Neaves was close on explaining why his function is perfect choice for testing for an int (as possibly most people would need). He made some errors on his ctype_digit() output though - possibly a typo, or maybe a bug in his version of PHP at the time.

The correct output for parts of his examples should be:

<?php
var_dump
(ctype_digit(23)); //bool(false)
var_dump(ctype_digit("23")); //bool(true)
var_dump(ctype_digit(23.5)); //bool(false)
var_dump(ctype_digit(NULL)); //bool(false)
var_dump(ctype_digit("")); //bool(false)
?>

As you can see, the reason why using *just* ctype_digit() may not always work is because it only returns TRUE when given a string as input - given a number value and it returns FALSE (which may be unexpected).
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16
andre dot roesti at 7flex dot net
14 years ago
With this function you can check if every of multiple variables are int. This is a little more comfortable than writing 'is_int' for every variable you've got.

<?php
function are_int ( ) {
$args = func_get_args ();
foreach (
$args as $arg )
if ( !
is_int ( $arg ) )
return
false;
return
true;
}

// Example:
are_int ( 4, 9 ); // true
are_int ( 22, 08, 'foo' ); // false
?>
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4
Hector (hector-ordonez.com)
8 years ago
Simon Neaves's answer is incomplete: negative integers will return false.

I recommend checking stackoverflow's answers:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6416763/checking-if-a-variable-is-an-integer-in-php
up
8
davide dot renzi at gmail dot com
8 years ago
I've found a faster way of determining an integer.
On my env, this method takes about half the time of using is_int().

Cast the value then check if it is identical to the original.

<?php
if ( (int) $n !== $n ) {
echo
'not is int';
} else {
echo
'is int';
}
?>
up
6
petepostma at gmail dot spam dot com
12 years ago
There is a versa to the vice of this int only type check.

is_int( $integer_type) will only return true, if the TYPE is int, not the value
ctype_digit( $string_type) will only return true if the TYPE is string, and its value is INT

therefore:
return ( is_int($value) || ctype_digit($value) );
up
7
nicolas dot giraud at actiane dot com
12 years ago
Just a shorter way to check if your variable is an int or a string containing a int without others digit than 0 to 9 :

<?php
$bool
= ( !is_int($value) ? (ctype_digit($value)) : true );

$value = 42; //true
$value = '42'; //true
$value = '1e9'; //false
$value = '0155'; //true
$value = 0155; //true
$value = 0xFF; //true while it's just the same as 255
$value = '0xFF'; //false
$value = 'a'; //false
$value = array(); //false
$value = array('5'); //false
$value = array(5); false
$value
= ''; //false
$value = NULL; //false

?>

Short & cool :)
up
1
Vasiliy Makogon
8 years ago
If you want detect integer of float values, which presents as pure int or float, and presents as string values, use this functions:

<?php
function isInteger($val)
{
if (!
is_scalar($val) || is_bool($val)) {
return
false;
}
if (
is_float($val + 0) && ($val + 0) > PHP_INT_MAX) {
return
false;
}
return
is_float($val) ? false : preg_match('~^((:?+|-)?[0-9]+)$~', $val);
}

function
isFloat($val)
{
if (!
is_scalar($val)) {
return
false;
}
return
is_float($val + 0);
}

foreach ([
'11111111111111111', 11111111111111111, // > PHP_INT_MAX - presents in PHP as float
1, '10', '+1', '1.1', 1.1, .2, 2., '.2', '2.',
'-2.', '-.2', null, [], true, false, 'string'
] as $value) {
echo
$value . ':' . gettype($value) . ' is Integer? - ' . (isInteger($value) ? 'yes' : 'no') . PHP_EOL;
echo
$value . ':' . gettype($value) . ' is Float? - ' . (isFloat($value) ? 'yes' : 'no') . PHP_EOL;
}
?>
up
1
gabe at websaviour dot com
21 years ago
Although this can be inferred from the documentation, beware of numeric strings. I ran into the problem in a MySQL app where I would either SELECT an INT PRIMARY KEY or INSERT a new record and use mysql_insert_id() to get the KEY before continuing onto the new section.

I used is_int() to make sure the subsequent queries wouldn't break when using the key variable. Unfortunately I failed to realize that while mysql_insert_id() returns an int, mysql_result() always returns a string even if you are SELECTing from an INT field.

Spent at least 30 minutes trying to figure out why existing records weren't getting linked, but new records would link fine. I ended up using intval() on mysql_result() to make sure subsequent queries still always work.
up
0
me at rexxars dot com
15 years ago
I was looking for the fastest way to check for an unsigned integer which supported large numbers like 4318943448871348 or 0xFFFFFFFF.

Fastest I came up with is this:
<?php
function is_unsigned_int($val) {
return
ctype_digit((string) $value));
}
?>

Will return true on 1515, 0xFFFFFFFF, '3515' and '1365158185855141'.
Will return false on 0.1515, '415.4134' and '-616'.

Be aware though, before PHP 5.1.0 this will return true on an empty string.

According to my benchmarks this is about 30% faster than the regex ^\d+$.
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