Hello PHP gurus,

The php-general list does not believe that PHP allows me to do either of the following:

(1) Writing an arbitrary substring of a string directly to a stream without first 
creating a string object for the substring.  I.E. There is no print($string, $start, 
$length) or fwrite($resource, $string, $length, $start).

(2) Creating multiple independent buffered characters streams.  It appears that stdout 
is the only instance available.

I need to be able to do the first to prevent a costly proliferation of string objects 
when parsing an input string and producing a new output string from it's substrings.  
My experience writing Java parsers for business portals clearly demonstrates that 
object creation, and particularly string creation, is a limiting factor to throughput. 
 Fixing this problem in PHP seems easy: we just need to add an optional start-offset 
parameter to fwrite().

I don't think I absolutely need the second feature, as I'm emulating multiple buffered 
character streams by saving and restoring the contents of stdout (via the output 
buffer) when switching between instances.  I just have to keep the application smart 
about switching so that I can minimize the switch costs.  However, it's possible that 
this could become an issue.

I can't create or use a PHP module since my customers generally only have FTP access 
to their web sites -- not even telnet, much less the ability to customize their PHP 
configuration.

So, is it truly impossible to do these things?  If so, when could I hope to see these 
features -- or at least feature (1) -- ship with core PHP?

Thank you for your help!
~joe

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