All the answers explaining why you get 2 and not 1 are actually wrong. According to the PHP documentation, mixing +
and ++
in this manner is undefined behavior, so you could get either 1 or 2. Switching to a different version of PHP may change the result you get, and it would be just as valid.
See example 1, which says:
// mixing ++ and + produces undefined behavior
$a = 1;
echo ++$a + $a++; // may print 4 or 5
Notes:
-
Operator precedence does not determine the order of evaluation. Operator precedence only determines that the expression
$l + ++$l
is parsed as$l + (++$l)
, but doesn’t determine if the left or right operand of the+
operator is evaluated first. If the left operand is evaluated first, the result would be 0+1, and if the right operand is evaluated first, the result would be 1+1. -
Operator associativity also does not determine order of evaluation. That the
+
operator has left associativity only determines that$a+$b+$c
is evaluated as($a+$b)+$c
. It does not determine in what order a single operator’s operands are evaluated.
Also relevant: On this bug report regarding another expression with undefined results, a PHP developer says: “We make no guarantee about the order of evaluation […], just as C doesn’t. Can you point to any place on the documentation where it’s stated that the first operand is evaluated first?”