Is there any difference between typecasting and using a function to convert a variable to some type?
(float)$var VS. floatval($var)
If there are, when one of those should be used instead of the other?
Is there any difference between typecasting and using a function to convert a variable to some type?
(float)$var VS. floatval($var)
If there are, when one of those should be used instead of the other?
There's no difference in the resulting value, just:
(float) is a language feature and very quickfloatval() incurs the overhead of a function call (minimal, but nonetheless...)floatval() as a function can be used in ways that (float) cannot, e.g. array_map('floatval', $foo)The last point is, I believe, the main reason for floatval's existence: so each casting operation has a function equivalent, which can be useful in some circumstances.