A PHP reference is an alias, which allows two different variables to write to the same value. In PHP, an object variable doesn't contain the object itself as value. It only contains an object identifier which allows object accessors to find the actual object.
With regards to your first question, the array is passed by reference UNLESS it is modified within the method / function you're calling. If you attempt to modify the array within the method / function, a copy of it is made first, and then only the copy is modified.
The $x (single dollar) is the normal variable with the name x that stores any value like string, integer, float, etc. The $$x (double dollar) is a reference variable that stores the value which can be accessed by using the $ symbol before the $x value. These are called variable variables in PHP.
Variable names in PHP start with $ so $entryId is the name of a variable. $this is a special variable in Object Oriented programming in PHP, which is reference to current object. -> is used to access an object member (like properties or methods) in PHP, like the syntax in C++. so your code means this:
Place the value of variable $entryId into the entryId field (or property) of this object.
The & operator in PHP, means pass reference. Here is a example:
$b=2;
$a=$b;
$a=3;
print $a;
print $b;
// output is 32
$b=2;
$a=&$b; // note the & operator
$a=3;
print $a;
print $b;
// output is 33
In the above code, because we used & operator, a reference to where $b is pointing is stored in $a. So $a is actually a reference to $b.
In PHP, arguments are passed by value by default (inspired by C). So when calling a function, when you pass in your values, they are copied by value not by reference. This is the default IN MOST SITUATIONS. However there is a way to have pass by reference behaviour, when defining a function. Example:
function plus_by_reference( &$param ) {
// what ever you do, will affect the actual parameter outside the function
$param++;
}
$a=2;
plus_by_reference( $a );
echo $a;
// output is 3
There are many built-in functions that behave like this. Like the sort() function that sorts an array will affect directly on the array and will not return another sorted array.
There is something interesting to note though. Because pass-by-value mode could result in more memory usage, and PHP is an interpreted language (so programs written in PHP are not as fast as compiled programs), to make the code run faster and minimize memory usage, there are some tweaks in the PHP interpreter. One is lazy-copy (I'm not sure about the name). Which means this:
When you are coping a variable into another, PHP will copy a reference to the first variable into the second variable. So your new variable, is actually a reference to the first one until now. The value is not copied yet. But if you try to change any of these variables, PHP will make a copy of the value, and then changes the variable. This way you will have the opportunity to save memory and time, IF YOU DO NOT CHANGE THE VALUE.
So:
$b=3;
$a=$b;
// $a points to $b, equals to $a=&$b
$b=4;
// now PHP will copy 3 into $a, and places 4 into $b
After all this, if you want to place the value of $entryId into 'entryId' property of your object, the above code will do this, and will not copy the value of entryId, until you change any of them, results in less memory usage. If you actually want them both to point to the same value, then use this:
$this->entryId=&$entryId;
No, As others said, "There is no Pointer in PHP." and I add, there is nothing RAM_related in PHP.
And also all answers are clear. But there were points being left out that I could not resist!
At first I have to say that PHP is really powerful language, knowing there is a construct named "eval", so you can create your PHP code while running it! (really cool!)
although there is the danger of PHP_Injection which is far more destructive that SQL_Injection. Beware!
example:
Code:
$a='echo "Hello World.";';
eval ($a);
Output
Hello World.
So instead of using a pointer to act like another Variable, You Can Make A Variable From Scratch!
$GLOBAL variable is pretty useful, You can access all variables by using its keys.
example:
Code:
$three="Hello";$variable=" Amazing ";$names="World";
$arr = Array("three","variable","names");
foreach($arr as $VariableName)
echo $GLOBALS[$VariableName];
Output
Hello Amazing World
Note: Other superglobals can do the same trick in smaller scales.
You can add as much as '$'s you want before a variable, If you know what you're doing.
example:
Code:
$a="b";
$b="c";
$c="d";
$d="e";
$e="f";
echo $a."-";
echo $$a."-"; //Same as $b
echo $$$a."-"; //Same as $$b or $c
echo $$$$a."-"; //Same as $$$b or $$c or $d
echo $$$$$a; //Same as $$$$b or $$$c or $$d or $e
Output
b-c-d-e-f
Reference are so close to pointers, but you may want to check this link for more clarification.
example 1:
Code:
$a="Hello";
$b=&$a;
$b="yello";
echo $a;
Output
yello
example 2:
Code:
function junk(&$tion)
{$GLOBALS['a'] = &$tion;}
$a="-Hello World<br>";
$b="-To You As Well";
echo $a;
junk($b);
echo $a;
Output
-Hello World
-To You As Well
Hope It Helps.
That syntax is a way of accessing a class member. PHP does not have pointers, but it does have references.
The syntax that you're quoting is basically the same as accessing a member from a pointer to a class in C++ (whereas dot notation is used when it isn't a pointer.)
To answer the second part of your question - there are no pointers in PHP.
When working with objects, you generally pass by reference rather than by value - so in some ways this operates like a pointer, but is generally completely transparent.
This does depend on the version of PHP you are using.
You can simulate pointers to instantiated objects to some degree:
class pointer {
var $child;
function pointer(&$child) {
$this->child = $child;
}
public function __call($name, $arguments) {
return call_user_func_array(
array($this->child, $name), $arguments);
}
}
Use like this:
$a = new ClassA();
$p = new pointer($a);
If you pass $p around, it will behave like a C++ pointer regarding method calls (you can't touch object variables directly, but that's evil anyways :) ).
entryId is an instance property of the current class ($this) And $entryId is a local variable
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