Yes, I know this is very bad code, but I’d still like to understand it:
$out = $a > 9 && $a < 15 ? "option1" : $a < 5 ? "option2" : "option3"; $out = $a > 9 && $a < 15 ? "option1" : ($a < 5 ? "option2" : "option3");
If $a is 11, then the result of the 1st line is “option 2”, but in the 2nd line, the result is “option 1” – what effect is the pair of brackets having?
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Answer
The first line is parsed like so:
$out = ($a > 9 && $a < 15 ? "option1" : $a < 5) ? "option2" : "option3";
Which is equivalent to the following (when $a == 11):
$out = "option1" ? "option2" : "option3";
"option1" coerced to boolean is true, so the above evaluates to "option2".
The second is being parsed as you would expect:
$out = ($a > 9 && $a < 15) ? "option1" : ($a < 5 ? "option2" : "option3");