Edit report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=29992&edit=1
ID: 29992
Comment by: iam4webwork at hotmail dot com
Reported by: fletch at pobox dot com
Summary: foreach by reference corrupts the array
Status: Not a bug
Type: Bug
Package: Scripting Engine problem
Operating System: linux
PHP Version: 5.0.1
Block user comment: N
Private report: N
New Comment:
I appreciate the explanation that Rasmus provides -- thank you!
One small but troublesome detail:
The first foreach changes the array by making $a[1] a reference
variable while $a[0] remains a normal variable.
$a = array(1,2);
foreach($a as &$e){}
var_dump($a,$e); // $a[1] == &int 2 $e == 2
foreach($a as $e){} $a[1] == &int 1 $e == 1
var_dump($a,$e); // $a[1] now points to last value of $a which is $a[0]
How about adding a switch so that users who don't want or understand
this behavior can turn it off? Then it would be up in front of the
documentation and would be less liable to be overlooked by users who
fail to scroll down to the colored box.
Even if PHP were to have lexical scope (how hard would that be to
implement and why can't PHP evolve that way?), that doesn't change
the fact that the first loop doing seemingly nothing, does change the array.
Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-05-04 08:04:56] email at stevemann dot net
[email protected] asked
"Ok, simple question then. Do you expect this to output 3?"
foreach(array(1,2,3) as $b) { }
echo $b;
I would much prefer it not to output 3. Personally I think it would make a lot
more sense and be a lot safer to have the array element references scoped to
the foreach block - so effectively being unset after the block has run. Having
the last element of the array floating around outside of the block is very
dangerous in my view and can lead to silent errors. As someone else mentioned,
I hate to think how much incorrect data there is out there because of the last
array element being accidentally changed outside of the block.
[email protected] rather flippantly said:
"no, we can't unset it by default, as people might use this for some weird
reason."
I can think of plenty of non-weird reasons why people might want this
behaviour. But if it was unset by default, it's a simple matter to assign the
reference to a variable defined outside of the block thereby making it
available outside the foreach. In other words, like this:
$c = NULL;
foreach(array(1,2,3) as $b) {
$c = $b;
}
unset($b);// simulates block-scoping of $b
echo $c;
This is not a bug, but I believe it's dangerous behaviour of PHP as it would
seem quite logical to assume that the element references are scoped to the
foreach block only - witness the many comments in this thread to that effect.
So my vote would be to change this behaviour to block-scoping in a future
version.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-03-19 18:51:24] paul dot dillinger at gmail dot com
Rasmus,
Thanks for looking at this. I found the problem. I would still call it a bug,
but I will describe it and you can decide. You are the man after all. You
were
right, I was passing a variable by reference in the few lines of code in front
of my example above:
foreach($this->data['external_'.$type] as &$item){
if(!empty($item['package'])){
$packages[] = $item;
$library_names[] = $item['library_name'];
unset($item);
}
}
/* Code in example above goes here */
BUT, where I see this as a bug was: $packages (the array that was getting
changed) was a new array created from the data of each $item. $packages was
never being referenced, though the variable $item it was created from was. So,
it should be a copy of the data and not THE data right?
I fixed it by simply not trying to pass by reference and changing unset($item)
to unset($this->data['external_'.$type]). Looking at it, that was the way to
do
it from the beginning. I see that, but I'm not sure why $packages gets changed
down the road (it was correct immediately after this, but it and all copies of
it change inside the next foreach). Any thoughts?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-03-01 18:52:14] [email protected]
Paul, my guess is that $item is a reference to an element in the $packages
array
going into this loop. Try using a different variable there.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-03-01 18:31:08] paul dot dillinger at gmail dot com
Rasmus, I think they might be having the same problem than I am where the array
literally changes as soon as I enter the foreach. I've given an in depth
explanation at: http://codeigniter.com/forums/viewthread/201487/ , but I'll
give
a summary here. I'm using a newer version of PHP (5.3.8) and foreach is
corrupting my array even when it's not being passed by reference.
My original code read something like this:
if(!empty($packages)){
/* $this->data['external_js'] is normal */
foreach($packages as $item){
/* $this->data['external_js'] has changed */
I noticed that one of my javascript files that this function is packing in to a
single package as not present. Even more odd was another was in the package
twice. So I started logging the $this->data['external_js'] array to FirePHP to
see where the error was happening. Strangely enough it happened immediately
after a foreach. I decided to make a separate copy of the array as a "just in
case" and report that. It changed the exact same way. I need to literally
hand
build my JS packages as I can't figure out any way to stop this array from
changing once it enters the foreach.
Here is the troubleshooting code with comments:
if(!empty($packages)){ // checking to see if there are multiple files to be
packaged together
if($type=='js'){ // check to see if it's javascript as that was the
package that had the problem
$ext_js_for_firephp = $this->data['external_js']; // found that
$this->data['external_js'] was changing so I assign it to a new variable
exclusively for logging to FirePHP, this variable exists NO WHERE ELSE in the
code.
fb_log('$ext_js_for_firephp before', $ext_js_for_firephp); //
Log to FirePHP
/* fb_log function for reference
function fb_log($Label,$Object=null){
$firephp = FirePHP::getInstance(true);
if(empty($Object)){
$Object = $Label;
$Label = NULL;
}
$firephp->log($Object, $Label);
}
*/
}
foreach($packages as $item){ // Starting the foreach
if($type=='js'){ // Again problem was with JS package changing
fb_log('$ext_js_for_firephp after', $ext_js_for_firephp);
//
Log to FirePHP, but now the value is different.
}
// AGAIN this happened before I started logging the vars, so logging is not
causing the issue. It's not an error with the logging output, as this is
exactly what the file being built had in it.
/* RESULT */
/* Before FirePHP returns:
$ext_js_for_firephp before = array(
[0] => array(
['template_id'] => 30
['js_id'] => 9
['id'] => 9
['library_name'] => 'modernizr'
['file_name'] => 'modernizr.min.js'
['version_major'] => 2
['version_minor'] => 0
['version_build'] => 6
['static'] => 1
['package'] => 0
['footer'] => 0
['priority'] => 100
)
[1] => array(
['template_id'] => 30
['js_id'] => 12
['id'] => 12
['library_name'] => 'default'
['file_name'] => 'default.js'
['version_major'] => 0
['version_minor'] => 0
['version_build'] => 4
['static'] => 1
['package'] => 1
['footer'] => 0
['priority'] => 90
)
[2] => array(
['template_id'] => 37
['js_id'] => 11
['id'] => 11
['library_name'] => 'jquery-ui-custom'
['file_name'] => 'jquery-ui-1.8.11.custom.min.js'
['version_major'] => 1
['version_minor'] => 8
['version_build'] => 11
['static'] => 1
['package'] => 0
['footer'] => 0
['priority'] => 0
)
)
*/
/* After FirePHP returns:
$ext_js_for_firephp after = array(
[0] => array(
['template_id'] => 30
['js_id'] => 9
['id'] => 9
['library_name'] => 'modernizr'
['file_name'] => 'modernizr.min.js'
['version_major'] => 2
['version_minor'] => 0
['version_build'] => 6
['static'] => 1
['package'] => 0
['footer'] => 0
['priority'] => 100
)
[1] => array(
['template_id'] => 30
['js_id'] => 12
['id'] => 12
['library_name'] => 'default'
['file_name'] => 'default.js'
['version_major'] => 0
['version_minor'] => 0
['version_build'] => 4
['static'] => 1
['package'] => 1
['footer'] => 0
['priority'] => 90
)
[2] => array(
['template_id'] => 30
['js_id'] => 12
['id'] => 12
['library_name'] => 'default'
['file_name'] => 'default.js'
['version_major'] => 0
['version_minor'] => 0
['version_build'] => 4
['static'] => 1
['package'] => 1
['footer'] => 0
['priority'] => 90
)
)
*/
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-02-09 17:20:44] [email protected]
What do you mean you con't care about the explanation?
Ok, simple question then. Do you expect this to output 3?
foreach(array(1,2,3) as $b) { }
echo $b;
If you do, then you don't want us to fix this "bug" because fixing it would
mean
$b is not 3 here.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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the rest of the comments, please view the bug report online at
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=29992
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