References Explained
PHP Manual

What References Do

There are three basic operations performed using references: assigning by reference, passing by reference, and returning by reference. This section will give an introduction to these operations, with links to further reading.

Assign By Reference

In the first of these, PHP references allow you to make two variables refer to the same content. Meaning, when you do:

<?php
$a 
=& $b;
?>
it means that $a and $b point to the same content.

Note: $a and $b are completely equal here. $a is not pointing to $b or vice versa. $a and $b are pointing to the same place.

Note: If arrays with references are copied, their values are not dereferenced. This is valid also for arrays passed by value to functions.

Note: If you assign, pass, or return an undefined variable by reference, it will get created.

Example #1 Using references with undefined variables

<?php
function foo(&$var) { }

foo($a); // $a is "created" and assigned to null

$b = array();
foo($b['b']);
var_dump(array_key_exists('b'$b)); // bool(true)

$c = new StdClass;
foo($c->d);
var_dump(property_exists($c'd')); // bool(true)
?>

The same syntax can be used with functions that return references, and with the new operator (since PHP 4.0.4 and before PHP 5.0.0):

<?php
$foo 
=& find_var($bar);
?>
Since PHP 5, new returns a reference automatically, so using =& in this context is deprecated and produces an E_STRICT message.

Warning

If you assign a reference to a variable declared global inside a function, the reference will be visible only inside the function. You can avoid this by using the $GLOBALS array.

Example #2 Referencing global variables inside functions

<?php
$var1 
"Example variable";
$var2 "";

function 
global_references($use_globals)
{
    global 
$var1$var2;
    if (!
$use_globals) {
        
$var2 =& $var1// visible only inside the function
    
} else {
        
$GLOBALS["var2"] =& $var1// visible also in global context
    
}
}

global_references(false);
echo 
"var2 is set to '$var2'\n"// var2 is set to ''
global_references(true);
echo 
"var2 is set to '$var2'\n"// var2 is set to 'Example variable'
?>
Think about global $var; as a shortcut to $var =& $GLOBALS['var'];. Thus assigning another reference to $var only changes the local variable's reference.

Note: If you assign a value to a variable with references in a foreach statement, the references are modified too.

Example #3 References and foreach statement

<?php
$ref 
0;
$row =& $ref;
foreach (array(
123) as $row) {
    
// do something
}
echo 
$ref// 3 - last element of the iterated array
?>

Pass By Reference

The second thing references do is to pass variables by reference. This is done by making a local variable in a function and a variable in the calling scope referencing the same content. Example:

<?php
function foo(&$var)
{
    
$var++;
}

$a=5;
foo($a);
?>
will make $a to be 6. This happens because in the function foo the variable $var refers to the same content as $a. For more information on this, read the passing by reference section.

Return By Reference

The third thing references can do is return by reference.


References Explained
PHP Manual