I'm converting some old PHP 4.x code for PHP 5.3. I've come across the following, and I'm not sure what it does.
$variable =& new ClassName();
What is the difference between that, and:
$variable = new ClassName();
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I'm converting some old PHP 4.x code for PHP 5.3. I've come across the following, and I'm not sure what it does.
What is the difference between that, and:
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feedback
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In Ye Olde Days of PHP4, =& was necessary when constructing objects. In PHP 5, it's not.
E.G.:
In other words, it has its uses, just not when instantiating an object. For that use, it's been depreacted. | ||||
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In PHP4, objects were passed by value by default, rather than by reference. This means that a copy of the object was made upon assignment. If you wanted to pass the object by reference instead of by value, you could use the I find that when migrating OO PHP4 code to PHP5, quite a lot of | |||
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