Edit report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=54740&edit=1

 ID:                 54740
 Comment by:         ni...@php.net
 Reported by:        dukeofgaming at gmail dot com
 Summary:            Ternary operator will not work with return by
                     reference
 Status:             Not a bug
 Type:               Bug
 Package:            Scripting Engine problem
 PHP Version:        Irrelevant
 Block user comment: N
 Private report:     N

 New Comment:

@marrch: PHP has no concept of a general & operator that takes the "reference" 
of a variable(whatever that's supposed to be). PHP only has a =& operator 
(which is really "=&" and not a combination of "=" and "&") which expects a 
variable on the right hand side. PHP also has a & modifier for function 
arguments and return values.

If you want to do yourself and others a favor, write $foo =& $bar rather than 
$foo = &$bar to make sure that there are no misunderstandings regarding this ;)


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-10-02 11:12:00] marrch dot caat at gmail dot com

Mike, I understand that. The second note tells I caanot return a reference to 
an expression result, such as &$object->method() or &(new StdClass()) - I can 
understand that. But the code sample I provided doesn't try to do that. To make 
things even simplier, the following code still fails to compile:
    $link = $flag ? &$a : &$b;
It doesn't try to return a reference to an expression, just a reference to a 
viriable; It doesn't try doing anything that the following code doesn't:
    if ($flag)
        $link = &$a;
    else
        $link = &$b;
And maybi I'm really stupid, but after 10 years in PHP development I still 
don't understand why the first code cannot be compiled :(

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-10-02 05:27:05] m...@php.net

I meant the documentation "Note:" (warning) not the user-contributed note.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-10-01 20:35:33] marrch dot caat at gmail dot com

I thoroughly read the article you mentioned, Mike, but still don't understand 
why the following code fails to compile:

$link = isset($i) ? (& $arr[$i]) : null;
- while the following works fine:
$link = &$arr[$i];

In this case, &$arr[$i] is a legal reference assignment, so the first code 
should behave equal to
if (isset($i)) {
  $link = &$arr[$i];
} else {
  $link = null;
}
- but this code works fine, and mentioned above isn't even compiled. What's 
wrong with it?

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-10-01 14:42:02] m...@php.net

Thank you for taking the time to write to us, but this is not
a bug. Please double-check the documentation available at
http://www.php.net/manual/ and the instructions on how to report
a bug at http://bugs.php.net/how-to-report.php

Check the second note here:
http://php.net/manual/en/language.references.return.php

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2012-08-27 14:17:44] marrch dot caat at gmail dot com

This is a general problem with reference inside ternary operator. For ex., the 
following script fails with the same error:
$link = isset($i) ? (& $arr[$i]) : null;
- while the following works fine:
$link = & $arr[$i];

------------------------------------------------------------------------


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the rest of the comments, please view the bug report online at

    https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=54740


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