Recently stumbled upon this neat little bug or 'feature' in PHP:

function myCmpFunc($a,$b) {
    function inner($p) {
         // do something
    }
    $inner_a = inner($a);
    $inner_b = inner($b);
    if ($inner_a == $inner_b) return 0;
    return ($inner_a > $inner_b ? -1 : 1);
}

Results in a fatal error "cannot redeclare function inner in ...", when called like this

usort($myArray, 'myCmpFunc');

It works flawlessly when function inner is declared outside of myCmpFunc and/or $myArray has not more than 2 elements ;)

-- edit --

somehow Related: PHP Fatal error: Cannot redeclare function

So here is my question, then: Is it possible to declare functions in local scope?

-- edit 2 --

Maybe, this works well in PHP 5.3 just read it has closures, yeehaa!

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Is this a question? – Sam Dufel May 10 '11 at 15:11
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Writing code that compiles but is invalid doesn't constitute a PHP bug. – Jason McCreary May 10 '11 at 15:13
@jason-mccreary you're absolutely right. Nonetheless, I find it useful to declare functions in functions and have them in outer function's local scope. Not in PHP, as functions are always in global scope, I learned. Have to use methods, then. – line-o May 11 '11 at 6:29
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3 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

function inner($p) is defined each time that function myCmpFunc($a,$b) is executed. Furthermore, the inner function is visible outside function myCmpFunc($a,$b) after that (which pretty much takes the sense out of allowing nested function definitions). That's why you get a duplicate definition error when you call the outer function a second time.

To work around this, check whether function_exists in the body of function myCmpFunc($a,$b).

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You must be right, that functions are always added to global scope... – line-o May 10 '11 at 15:24
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The function declaration is inside myCmpFunc, and because usort would call myCmpFunc for each element of an array, what happens is similar to declaring a function N times.

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The issue is you must call the outer function before using the inner function. As per this answer to a similar question Can I include a function inside of another function (PHP)?

So your use of inner($a); is not valid.

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myCmpFunc gets called before inner ... – line-o May 10 '11 at 15:21
@line-o, not within the body of myCmpFunc – Yoel May 10 '11 at 15:24
This is only true for functions declared inside of conditions. – line-o May 11 '11 at 6:35
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