Assignment OperatorsThe basic assignment operator is "=". Your first inclination might be to think of this as "equal to". Don't. It really means that the left operand gets set to the value of the expression on the right (that is, "gets set to"). The value of an assignment expression is the value assigned. That is, the value of "$a = 3" is 3. This allows you to do some tricky things:
<?php For arrays, assigning a value to a named key is performed using the "=>" operator. The precedence of this operator is the same as other assignment operators. In addition to the basic assignment operator, there are "combined operators" for all of the binary arithmetic, array union and string operators that allow you to use a value in an expression and then set its value to the result of that expression. For example:
<?php Note that the assignment copies the original variable to the new one (assignment by value), so changes to one will not affect the other. This may also have relevance if you need to copy something like a large array inside a tight loop. An exception to the usual assignment by value behaviour within PHP occurs with objects, which are assigned by reference in PHP 5. Objects may be explicitly copied via the clone keyword. Assignment by ReferenceAssignment by reference is also supported, using the "$var = &$othervar;" syntax. Assignment by reference means that both variables end up pointing at the same data, and nothing is copied anywhere.
Example #1 Assigning by reference
<?php
As of PHP 5, the new
operator returns a reference automatically, so assigning the result of
new by reference results
in an For example, this code will result in a warning:
<?php More information on references and their potential uses can be found in the References Explained section of the manual. |