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本文檔使用 php中文網手册 發布
许多 PHP 的语法结构是通过引用机制实现的,所以上述有关引用绑定的一切也都适用于这些结构。一些结构,例如引用传递和返回,已经在上面提到了。其它使用引用的结构有:
当用 global $var 声明一个变量时实际上建立了一个到全局变量的引用。也就是说和这样做是相同的:
<?php
$var =& $GLOBALS [ "var" ];
?>
这意味着,例如,unset $var 不会 unset 全局变量。
在一个对象的方法中, $this 永远是调用它的对象的引用。
[#1] lutondatta at gmail dot com [2014-01-06 15:12:29]
This is very useful in passing large arrays. If you do not pass the array by reference, you are creating another copy of the array in memory.
<?php
//Part 1
$x = 40;
$y = $x;
$z =& $x;
echo '$x is ' . $x . '<br />'; //Show 40
echo '$y is ' . $y . '<br />'; //Show 40
echo '$z is ' . $z . '<br />'; //Show 40
//Part 2
$x = 50;
echo '$x is ' . $x . '<br />'; //Show 50
echo '$y is ' . $y . '<br />'; //Show 40
echo '$z is ' . $z . '<br />'; //Show 50
?>
In part 2 value of $z will changes according to $x.
[#2] CodeWorX.ch [2011-08-02 13:38:01]
here is an unconventional (and not very fast) way of detecting references within arrays:
<?php
function is_array_reference ($arr, $key) {
$isRef = false;
ob_start();
var_dump($arr);
if (strpos(preg_replace("/[ \n\r]*/i", "", preg_replace("/( ){4,}.*(\n\r)*/i", "", ob_get_contents())), "[" . $key . "]=>&") !== false)
$isRef = true;
ob_end_clean();
return $isRef;
}
?>
[#3] Abimael Rodrguez Coln [2011-04-26 11:55:44]
This is one way to check if is a reference
<?php
$a = 1;
$b =& $a;
$c = 2;
$d = 3;
$e = array($a);
function is_reference($var){
$val = $GLOBALS[$var];
$tmpArray = array();
foreach($GLOBALS as $k => $v){
if(!is_array($v)){
$tmpArray[$k] = $v;
}
}
foreach($GLOBALS as $k => $v){
if($k != 'GLOBALS'
&& $k != '_POST'
&& $k != '_GET'
&& $k != '_COOKIE'
&& $k != '_FILES'
&& $k != $var
&& !is_array($v)
){
usleep(1);
$GLOBALS[$k] = md5(microtime());
}
}
$bool = $val != $GLOBALS[$var];
foreach($tmpArray as $k => $v){
$GLOBALS[$k] = $v;
}
return $bool;
}
var_dump(is_reference('a'));
var_dump(is_reference('b'));
var_dump(is_reference('c'));
var_dump(is_reference('d'));
?>
This won't check if reference is inside a array.
[#4] BenBE at omorphia dot de [2007-01-07 11:37:45]
Hi,
If you want to check if two variables are referencing each other (i.e. point to the same memory) you can use a function like this:
<?php
function same_type(&$var1, &$var2){
return gettype($var1) === gettype($var2);
}
function is_ref(&$var1, &$var2) {
//If a reference exists, the type IS the same
if(!same_type($var1, $var2)) {
return false;
}
$same = false;
//We now only need to ask for var1 to be an array ;-)
if(is_array($var1)) {
//Look for an unused index in $var1
do {
$key = uniqid("is_ref_", true);
} while(array_key_exists($key, $var1));
//The two variables differ in content ... They can't be the same
if(array_key_exists($key, $var2)) {
return false;
}
//The arrays point to the same data if changes are reflected in $var2
$data = uniqid("is_ref_data_", true);
$var1[$key] =& $data;
//There seems to be a modification ...
if(array_key_exists($key, $var2)) {
if($var2[$key] === $data) {
$same = true;
}
}
//Undo our changes ...
unset($var1[$key]);
} elseif(is_object($var1)) {
//The same objects are required to have equal class names ;-)
if(get_class($var1) !== get_class($var2)) {
return false;
}
$obj1 = array_keys(get_object_vars($var1));
$obj2 = array_keys(get_object_vars($var2));
//Look for an unused index in $var1
do {
$key = uniqid("is_ref_", true);
} while(in_array($key, $obj1));
//The two variables differ in content ... They can't be the same
if(in_array($key, $obj2)) {
return false;
}
//The arrays point to the same data if changes are reflected in $var2
$data = uniqid("is_ref_data_", true);
$var1->$key =& $data;
//There seems to be a modification ...
if(isset($var2->$key)) {
if($var2[$key] === $data) {
$same = true;
}
}
//Undo our changes ...
unset($var1->$key);
} elseif (is_resource($var1)) {
if(get_resource_type($var1) !== get_resource_type($var2)) {
return false;
}
return ((string) $var1) === ((string) $var2);
} else {
//Simple variables ...
if($var1!==$var2) {
//Data mismatch ... They can't be the same ...
return false;
}
//To check for a reference of a variable with simple type
//simply store its old value and check against modifications of the second variable ;-)
do {
$key = uniqid("is_ref_", true);
} while($key === $var1);
$tmp = $var1; //WE NEED A COPY HERE!!!
$var1 = $key; //Set var1 to the value of $key (copy)
$same = $var1 === $var2; //Check if $var2 was modified too ...
$var1 = $tmp; //Undo our changes ...
}
return $same;
}
?>
Although this implementation is quite complete, it can't handle function references and some other minor stuff ATM.
This function is especially useful if you want to serialize a recursive array by hand.
The usage is something like:
<?php
$a = 5;
$b = 5;
var_dump(is_ref($a, $b)); //false
$a = 5;
$b = $a;
var_dump(is_ref($a, $b)); //false
$a = 5;
$b =& $a;
var_dump(is_ref($a, $b)); //true
echo "---\n";
$a = array();
var_dump(is_ref($a, $a)); //true
$a[] =& $a;
var_dump(is_ref($a, $a[0])); // true
echo "---\n";
$b = array(array());
var_dump(is_ref($b, $b)); //true
var_dump(is_ref($b, $b[0])); //false
echo "---\n";
$b = array();
$b[] = $b;
var_dump(is_ref($b, $b)); //true
var_dump(is_ref($b, $b[0])); //false
var_dump(is_ref($b[0], $b[0][0])); //true*
echo "---\n";
var_dump($a);
var_dump($b);
?>
* Please note the internal behaviour of PHP that seems to do the reference assignment BEFORE actually copying the variable!!! Thus you get an array containing a (different) recursive array for the last testcase, instead of an array containing an empty array as you could expect.
BenBE.
[#5] ludvig dot ericson at gmail dot com [2006-02-27 15:36:54]
For the sake of clarity:
$this is a PSEUDO VARIABLE - thus not a real variable. ZE treats is in other ways then normal variables, and that means that some advanced variable-things won't work on it (for obvious reasons):
<?php
class Test {
var $monkeys = 0;
function doFoobar() {
$var = "this";
$$var->monkeys++; // Will fail on this line.
}
}
$obj = new Test;
$obj->doFoobar(); // Will fail in this call.
var_dump($obj->monkeys); // Will return int(0) if it even reaches here.
?>
[#6] ksamvel at gmail dot com [2006-02-10 09:02:40]
One may check reference to any object by simple operator==( object). Example:
<?php
class A {}
$oA1 = new A();
$roA = & $oA1;
echo "roA and oA1 are " . ( $roA == $oA1 ? "same" : "not same") . "<br>";
$oA2 = new A();
$roA = & $roA2;
echo "roA and oA1 are " . ( $roA == $oA1 ? "same" : "not same") . "<br>";
?>
Output:
roA and oA1 are same
roA and oA1 are not same
Current technique might be useful for caching in objects when inheritance is used and only base part of extended class should be copied (analog of C++: oB = oA):
<?php
class A {
public function isChanged() { return $this->bChanged; }
private $bChanged;
//...
}
class B extends A {
// ...
public function set( &$roObj) {
if( $roObj instanceof A) {
if( $this->roAObj == $roObj &&
$roObj->isChanged()) {
} else {
$this->roAObj = &$roObj;
}
}
}
private $roAObj;
}
?>
[#7] Sergio Santana: ssantana at tlaloc dot imta dot mx [2005-12-16 08:41:29]
*** WARNING about OBJECTS TRICKY REFERENCES ***
-----------------------------------------------
The use of references in the context of classes
and objects, though well defined in the documentation,
is somehow tricky, so one must be very careful when
using objects. Let's examine the following two
examples:
<?php
class y {
public $d;
}
$A = new y;
$A->d = 18;
echo "Object \$A before operation:\n";
var_dump($A);
$B = $A; // This is not an explicit (=&) reference assignment,
// however, $A and $B refer to the same instance
// though they are not equivalent names
$C =& $A; // Explicit reference assignment, $A and $C refer to
// the same instance and they have become equivalent
// names of the same instance
$B->d = 1234;
echo "\nObject \$B after operation:\n";
var_dump($B);
echo "\nObject \$A implicitly modified after operation:\n";
var_dump($A);
echo "\nObject \$C implicitly modified after operation:\n";
var_dump($C);
// Let's make $A refer to another instance
$A = new y;
$A->d = 25200;
echo "\nObject \$B after \$A modification:\n";
var_dump($B); // $B doesn't change
echo "\nObject \$A after \$A modification:\n";
var_dump($A);
echo "\nObject \$C implicitly modified after \$A modification:\n";
var_dump($C); // $C changes as $A changes
?>
Thus, note the difference between assignments $X = $Y and $X =& $Y.
When $Y is anything but an object instance, the first assignment means
that $X will hold an independent copy of $Y, and the second, means that
$X and $Y will refer to the same thing, so they are tight together until
either $X or $Y is forced to refer to another thing. However, when $Y
happens to be an object instance, the semantic of $X = $Y changes and
becomes only slightly different to that of $X =& $Y, since in both
cases $X and $Y become references to the same object. See what this
example outputs:
Object $A before operation:
object(y)#1 (1) {
["d"]=>
int(18)
}
Object $B after operation:
object(y)#1 (1) {
["d"]=>
int(1234)
}
Object $A implicitly modified after operation:
object(y)#1 (1) {
["d"]=>
int(1234)
}
Object $C implicitly modified after operation:
object(y)#1 (1) {
["d"]=>
int(1234)
}
Object $B after $A modification:
object(y)#1 (1) {
["d"]=>
int(1234)
}
Object $A after $A modification:
object(y)#2 (1) {
["d"]=>
int(25200)
}
Object $C implicitly modified after $A modification:
object(y)#2 (1) {
["d"]=>
int(25200)
}
Let's review a SECOND EXAMPLE:
<?php
class yy {
public $d;
function yy($x) {
$this->d = $x;
}
}
function modify($v)
{
$v->d = 1225;
}
$A = new yy(3);
var_dump($A);
modify($A);
var_dump($A);
?>
Although, in general, a formal argument declared
as $v in the function 'modify' shown above, implies
that the actual argument $A, passed when calling
the function, is not modified, this is not the
case when $A is an object instance. See what the
example code outputs when executed:
object(yy)#3 (1) {
["d"]=>
int(3)
}
object(yy)#3 (1) {
["d"]=>
int(1225)
}
[#8] Sergio Santana: ssantana at tlaloc dot imta dot mx [2005-08-10 09:30:28]
Sometimes an object's method returning a reference to itself is required. Here is a way to code it:
<?php
class MyClass {
public $datum;
public $other;
function &MyRef($d) { // the method
$this->datum = $d;
return $this; // returns the reference
}
}
$a = new MyClass;
$b = $a->MyRef(25); // creates the reference
echo "This is object \$a: \n";
print_r($a);
echo "This is object \$b: \n";
print_r($b);
$b->other = 50;
echo "This is object \$a, modified" .
" indirectly by modifying ref \$b: \n";
print_r($a);
?>
This code outputs:
This is object $a:
MyClass Object
(
[datum] => 25
[other] =>
)
This is object $b:
MyClass Object
(
[datum] => 25
[other] =>
)
This is object $a, modified indirectly by modifying ref $b:
MyClass Object
(
[datum] => 25
[other] => 50
)