I\'m getting mixed signals all over the place.
Do I use the ampersand to pass variables by reference or not?
The following link seems to tell me that it is depre
The reason different articles seem to be saying different things is that they are talking about different kinds of pass-by-reference.
The main thing that determines if a parameter should be passed by reference is the function signature itself, and the fundamentals of this have not changed since PHP 4. Consider this example:
function foo( $by_value, &$by_reference ) { /* ... */ }
$a = 1; $b = 2;
foo( $a, $b );
Here, the outer variable $a
is being passed to the function by value, as though it is being assigned as $by_value = $a;
- changes to $by_value
cannot affect $a
. The variable $b
however is being passed by reference; just like an assignment of the form $by_reference =& $b;
this means that there is one variable referenced by two names, and any assignment to one will act as an assignment to both.
If you pass an "ordinary" value (a string, number, or array) by value, its value is just copied to the new variable. As of PHP 5: If you pass an object by value, however, something slightly different happens - the "value" copied is just a pointer to the same object. This means that if $a
were an object, you could call $by_value->some_property = 42;
and $a->some_property
would also be 42
. However, if you assigned some new value to $by_value
, it would still not affect $a
.
Until PHP 5.4, there was an extra way to pass a parameter by reference, which was to "force" the reference behaviour at call-time. This meant that you could write foo(&$a, &$b);
and "capture" changes made to $by_value
inside the foo()
function. Relying on this was generally a bad idea, and so it was removed. (It landed in 5.4 because it was intended for removal in PHP 6, but that project was put on indefinite hold, with the smaller changes landing in 5.3 and 5.4).
Finally, functions can return a variable by reference (as discussed in the manual here). This is a little fiddly, as it actually requires you to put &
in two places: at the beginning of the function declaration, to say that return
should mean "return this variable reference" not "return this value"; and in the code calling it, to assign a variable to that reference, rather than just copying its value. Here's a silly example which combines a reference parameter with a reference return (the two do not have to go together, it's just an example):
function &bar(&$some_param) { return $some_param; }
$a = 1;
$b =& bar($a);
// $b and $a now point at the same variable, not just the same value
// it was passed into and out of a function, and assigned to a new variable,
// but all those operations were by reference
Note that many people mistakenly believe that passing a variable by reference will give them a performance benefit, and this was often their only reason for using call-time pass-by-reference. This is in fact usually wrong, as the Zend Engine which powers PHP uses a technique called "copy on write" to leave multiple variables which happen to have the same value pointing at the same piece of memory, even if they are not bound up as references. In fact, reference assignment generally defeats this optimisation, due to the way the engine tracks which variables are in the copy-on-write state.