The problem with references is that they're hard to reason about - and having arrays suddenly be mutable when they usually aren't is surprising......and surprising is bad.
Anonymous
ahh.. I assumed they were bad, becuase they may cause confusion as it was with the case of variable variables.. @Trowski
I really should ask what context you're using them in, because returning references from or passing references to functions can be bad.
Anonymous
Nah, just modifying an array value.
Anonymous
speaking of functions, is there anything wrong with using a cloure to return a single instance of a class ... like a singleton ... with static $var inside?
the only nearly reasonable use for references I can think of is when you need to return some result and you also need to inform status. Since you can't return multiple values:
function doSomethingWithSideEffect($somearg, &$status) {
$result = tryToDoSomething();
if($result) $status = true; else $status = false;
return $result;
}
doSomethingWithSideEffect('blah', $status);
// but I wouldn't do it myself, it's just a use case captured from somewhere on github.
That file has a number of examples of using closures with references to wrap around local variables. Since the scope is limited it's much harder to get in trouble.
@marcio Fortunately using coroutines makes most of that unnecessary. :)
@Trowski You can initialize it to IS_UNDEF rather than IS_NULL. If nothing is passed, it'll stay IS_UNDEF, if an explicit NULL is passed, it'll promote to IS_NULL