| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142 | <?php/* * By adding type hints and enabling strict type checking, code can become * easier to read, self-documenting and reduce the number of potential bugs. * By default, type declarations are non-strict, which means they will attempt * to change the original type to match the type specified by the * type-declaration. * * In other words, if you pass a string to a function requiring a float, * it will attempt to convert the string value to a float. * * To enable strict mode, a single declare directive must be placed at the top * of the file. * This means that the strictness of typing is configured on a per-file basis. * This directive not only affects the type declarations of parameters, but also * a function's return type. * * For more info review the Concept on strict type checking in the PHP track * <link>. * * To disable strict typing, comment out the directive below. */declare(strict_types=1);function buildLetters(): array {  $letters = [];  $base = ord('A');  for ($i = 0; $i <= 25; $i++) {    $letters[chr($base+$i)] = TRUE;  }  return $letters;}function isPangram(string $string): bool {  $letters = buildLetters();  foreach (mb_str_split(mb_strtoupper($string)) as $letter) {    unset($letters[$letter]);  }  return empty($letters);}
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