14

I have a function that returns an array. I have another function that just returns the first row, but for some reason, it makes me use an intermediate variable, i.e. this fails:

function f1(/*some args*/) {
    return /*an array*/;
}
function f2(/*some args*/) {
    return f1(/*some args*/)[0];
}

. . . with:

Parse error: syntax error, unexpected '[' in util.php on line 10

But, this works:

function f1(/*some args*/) {
    return /*an array*/;
}
function f2(/*some args*/) {
    $temp = f1(/*some args*/);
    return $temp[0];
}

I wasn't able to find anything pertinent online (my searches kept getting confused by people with "?", "{", "<", etc.).

I'm self-taught in PHP - is there some reason why I can't do this directly that I've missed?

4

2 Answers 2

25

You can't use function array dereferencing

return f1(/*some args*/)[0];

until PHP 5.4.0 and above.

1
  • 1
    props for revealing the proper term for this, it ended a long search for what should have been a simple question. Jan 24, 2013 at 19:41
2

The reason for this behavior is that PHP functions can't be chained like JavaScript functions can be. Just like document.getElementsByTagNames('a')[0] is possible.

You have to stick to the second approach for PHP version < 5.4

Function array dereferencing has been added, e.g. foo()[0].

http://php.net/manual/en/migration54.new-features.php

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