0
votes

Looking at the source code of Propel (the PHP ORM library), I have found this method inside the propel/propel1/runtime/lib/query/Criteria.php file:

  /**
     * Set offset.
     *
     * @param int $offset An int with the value for offset.  (Note this values is
     *                    cast to a 32bit integer and may result in truncation)
     *
     * @return Criteria Modified Criteria object (for fluent API)
     */
    public function setOffset($offset)
    {
        $this->offset = (int) $offset;

        return $this;
    }

Why in the doc comments they say that the value casted to int may result in truncation??? Isn't the int kept to e.g. 4000000000 in 64 bit environment? Actually, it is, so why this "Note"?

Thanks for the attention!

1
not all PHP installs are 64bit, after all. On a 32bit PHP install, an int will max out at 2^31-1.Marc B
@MarcB I know, but if you read the documentation, it seems that they are assuming that the same goes for 64 bit, and it's not.tonix

1 Answers

3
votes

The maximum and minimum size of integer depends of the build of PHP : 32 or 64 Bits (operating system and processor must also follow)

For PHP 32-Bits the range is between ]-2147483648, 2147483647[
For PHP 64-Bits the range is between ]-9223372036854775808, 9223372036854775807[

My Test (PHP 32-Bits, WINDOWS 7 64-Bits, Intel CORE i3 64-Bits) :

<?php
$i = (int)2147483647;
var_dump($i);

Will ouput :

int(2147483647)

2nd test (just increment by 1 the last value)

<?php
    $i = (int)2147483647;
    var_dump($i);

Will ouput :

int(-2147483648)

Finally : to be sure about the max value of integer in your environment, just print this

var_dump(PHP_INT_MAX);