The expression $field of type null|string is loosely compared to true; this is ambiguous if the string can be empty. You might want to explicitly use !== null instead.
In PHP, under loose comparison (like ==, or !=, or switch conditions),
values of different types might be equal.
For string values, the empty string '' is a special case, in particular
the following results might be unexpected:
''==false// true''==null// true'ab'==false// false'ab'==null// false// It is often better to use strict comparison''===false// false''===null// false
The expression $field of type null|string is loosely compared to true; this is ambiguous if the string can be empty. You might want to explicitly use !== null instead.
In PHP, under loose comparison (like ==, or !=, or switch conditions),
values of different types might be equal.
For string values, the empty string '' is a special case, in particular
the following results might be unexpected:
''==false// true''==null// true'ab'==false// false'ab'==null// false// It is often better to use strict comparison''===false// false''===null// false
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52
return $this->errors[$field] ?? [];
53
}
54
55
return $this->errors;
56
}
57
58
/**
59
* @return array
60
*/
61
public function getFirstErrors(): array
62
{
63
$result = [];
64
foreach ($this->getErrors() as $field => $errors) {
In PHP, under loose comparison (like
==
, or!=
, orswitch
conditions), values of different types might be equal.For
string
values, the empty string''
is a special case, in particular the following results might be unexpected: