19

I had the bright idea of using a custom error handler which led me down a rabbit hole.

Following code gives (with and without custom error handler): Fatal error: Only variables can be passed by reference

function foo(){
    $b=array_pop(array("a","b","c"));
    return $b;
}
print_r(foo());

Following code gives (only with a custom error handler): (2048) Only variables should be passed by reference

function foo(){
    $a=explode( '/' , 'a/b/c');
    $c=array_pop(array_slice($a,-2,1));
    return $c;
}
print_r(foo());

The second one worries me since I have a lot of 'compact' code. So, I either ditch the bright idea of using a custom error handler (to improve my logging module) or expand all my code.

Anyone with better ideas? Also, WTF?

UPDATE:

Thanks to the answers I've learnt something about how php does error handling. The confusion of E_ALL not including E_STRICT (php 5) is not cool.

On top of all this, creating your own custom error handler enables E_STRICT by default and thats where problems start.

The moral of the story is to use your own error handler to catch them ALL and use the error constants (E_STRICT, E_USER_WARNING, E_USER_ERROR, etc.) to do your filtering.

As for the 'memory corruption issue' with variable references and certain functions, what can I say? Doubly uncool. I'll (which doesn't mean you should) ignore E_STRICT in my error handler and life goes on.

1
  • $b=current(array_reverse(array("a","b","c"))); // yes, it's silly, but it works :)
    – MSpreij
    Oct 11, 2011 at 9:31

8 Answers 8

20

array_pop() tries to change that value which is passed as parameter. Now in your second example this is the return value from array_slice(). In engine terms this is a "temporary value" and such a value can't be passed by references. what you need is a temporary variable:

function foo(){
    $a=explode( '/' , 'a/b/c');
    $b=array_slice($a,-2,1);
    $c=array_pop($b);
    return $c;
}
print_r(foo());

Then a reference to $b can be passed to array_pop(). See http://php.net/references for more details on references.

10

Here is what I get when trying your second php code snippet in php-cli after setting error_reporting to E_ALL | E_STRICT

    gparis@techosaure:~/workspace/universcine.com$ php -a
Interactive shell

php > function foo(){
php {     $a=explode( '/' , 'a/b/c');
php {     $c=array_pop(array_slice($a,-2,1));
php {     return $c;
php { }
php > print_r(foo());
PHP Strict standards:  Only variables should be passed by reference in php shell code on line 3
PHP Stack trace:
PHP   1. {main}() php shell code:0
PHP   2. foo() php shell code:1

As you can see, it's only strict standards here. And you can easily let your custom error handler ignore them (based on the value you get : 2048 for instance, here).

As of php 5.3, E_ALL does not include E_STRICT, look at this :

php > foreach(array("E_ALL", "E_DEPRECATED", "E_STRICT", "E_NOTICE", "E_PARSE", "E_WARNING") as $const) echo $const . "  :\t" . constant($const) ."\t". decbin(constant($const)). "\n";
E_ALL  :        30719   111011111111111
E_DEPRECATED  : 8192     10000000000000
E_STRICT  :     2048       100000000000
E_NOTICE  :     8                  1000
E_PARSE  :      4                   100
E_WARNING  :    2                    10

As of php 5.4, E_ALL does include E_STRICT :

E_ALL  :            32767   111111111111111
E_DEPRECATED  :     8192     10000000000000
E_STRICT  :         2048       100000000000
E_NOTICE  :         8                  1000
E_PARSE  :          4                   100
E_WARNING  :        2                    10
7
  • No it does not, I edited my post to add an explainatory code snippet. See the missing 1 in E_ALL? If you add E_STRICT, you get 111111111111111! Means jackpot!
    – greg0ire
    Jun 3, 2010 at 16:23
  • in PHP 5.3 E_ALL contains E_STRICT
    – johannes
    Jun 3, 2010 at 18:44
  • No, but it will in php 6. See this post : stackoverflow.com/questions/1638238/…
    – greg0ire
    Jun 3, 2010 at 21:12
  • Actually, E_STRICT is included in E_ALL from PHP 5.4 (as is now stated in that linked question) - see the PHP Manual: php.net/manual/en/errorfunc.constants.php - However, w3schools.com still incorrectly reports that it is only included from PHP 6.
    – MrWhite
    Sep 22, 2013 at 13:58
  • @w3d : you're right, I updated my answer, feel free to do so yourself if you see mistakes.
    – greg0ire
    Sep 22, 2013 at 18:33
5

It's a memory corruption issue (according to PHP dev team). Just throw in an assignment:

function foo(){
    $b = array_pop($arr = array("a","b","c"));
    return $b;
}
print_r(foo());

:

function foo(){
    $a = explode( '/' , 'a/b/c');
    $c = array_pop($arr = array_slice($a,-2,1));
    return $c;
}
print_r(foo());

The second produces an E_STRICT. You can handle that differently in your error handler if you wish (if you don't want to change those functions).

6
  • I saw that trick somewhere. Does this apply to all or some functions?
    – zaf
    Jun 3, 2010 at 16:04
  • You can throw assignment in any function. But not in language constructs, such as empty.
    – webbiedave
    Jun 3, 2010 at 16:09
  • This seriously hinders my kung-fu-ness.
    – zaf
    Jun 3, 2010 at 16:31
  • The assignment in the parameter list is undefined behavior. with array_pop($arr = array("a","b","c")); it is not clear what will happen first - $arr = array("a","b","c") or array_pop($arr) or array_pop(array("a","b","c")); and can change between all releases.
    – johannes
    Jun 3, 2010 at 18:43
  • @johannes: Why do you say that?
    – webbiedave
    Jun 3, 2010 at 19:06
2

array_pop() changes that value passed to it which is where the error is coming from. A function cannot be changed. In other words, you need to assign the array to a variable first (ref: manual), and then run array_pop().

The code you need is this:

function foo(){
    $a = array("a","b","c");
    $b = array_pop($a);
    return $b;
}

Edit: Both functions you mentioned have the same problem. Assign the array to a variable and pass the variable to array_pop().

2

I think that now (since php 5) it should be:

function &foo(){ //NOTICE THE &
    $b=array_pop(array("a","b","c"));
    return $b;
}
print_r(foo());

and

function &foo(){ //NOTICE THE &
    $a=explode( '/' , 'a/b/c');
    $c=array_pop(array_slice($a, $b = -2, $c = 1)); //NOW NO DIRECT VALUES ARE PASSED IT MUST BE VARIABLES
    return $c;
}
print_r(foo());

but i'm just a begginer :)

1
  • Thanks for the answer. I don't have time to try it but are you saying that adding a '&' makes it work? And what does it do? I'll check it tomorrow.
    – zaf
    Dec 26, 2011 at 18:53
1

Try this:

function foo(){
    $a = array("a","b","c");
    $b = array_pop($a);
    return $b;
}
0
1

I just got this error chaining methods.

doSomething()->andThis()

I had:

doSomething()-andThis() // missing `>` character

My scenario was a little more complex, but it stemmed from the accidental subtraction operation.

0

Same question Strict Standards: Only variables should be passed by reference, also https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=48937.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.