Hello Andi, the classname doesn't help, it is the handler that you need. In theory you can have two objects with the same id and classname but not with the same id and handler table.
best regards marcus Sunday, June 4, 2006, 5:14:46 PM, you wrote: > At 08:08 AM 6/4/2006, Marcus Boerger wrote: >>Hello Andi, >> >> it was your own argument that the id itself is not unique when some >>time ago somebody wanted to have access to that id from userland. And >>it is also the reason for SplObjectStorage the way it is today. > The object id itself is not unique, but coupled with the class name > it is. All this means is that the unique id has to be a string and > not a number. I mentioned in the past that it'd be a problem to have > a number as the unique id. >>By 'it hash' nothing to do with hash' i mean that the classname does >>not belong into a hash. > My point is that the string "ClassName#id" is what would be the > unique identifier. e.g. that's what toKey() would return (assuming > we'd want such a method). > Andi Best regards, Marcus -- PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php