> For much the same reason, capture analysis for arrow functions is very primitive. It basically finds all variables that are used inside the closure body and tries to import them, silently failing if they are not available in the outer scope. For multi-line closures, this would commonly end up importing too many variables. For example: fn() { $tmp = foo(); bar($tmp); return $tmp; } Here, there is no need to import $tmp from the outer scope, but a naive implementation (which I assume you're using) will still try to capture it. Now, this has two effects: a) Performance, as we're trying to capture unnecessary variables. This may be negligible, but it would be good to at least quantify. I would rather there not be recommendations along the line of "you should use function() for performance-critical code, because it's faster than fn()". b) Subtle side-effects, visible in debugging functionality, or through destructor effects (the fact that a variable is captured may be observable). I think it nothing else, the RFC should at least make clear that this behavior is explicitly unspecified, and a future implementation may no longer capture variables where any path from entry to read passes a write.