yes, I am asking how to start my own super global...
And even a PHP beginner know that $GLOBALS is a array containing all the 
global variables and it is used in a function or a class. So I think no one 
will ask a question here which the answer is simply $GLOBALS.

Any finally, thanks Jasper for the answer.

"Jasper Bryant-Greene" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Kevin Waterson wrote:
>> This one time, at band camp, Jasper Bryant-Greene 
>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Because he asked for superglobals, not globals. $GLOBALS (not $_GLOBALS)
>>
>> meh, force of habit
>>
>>>happens to be an example of a superglobal.
>>
>>
>> and variable can be set within its scope, so why not use it?
>> As we see in the manual at $GLOBALS _is_ a super global and available
>> to all scopes within the script.
>> http://www.php.net/manual/en/reserved.variables.php#reserved.variables.globals
>> it refers to $GLOBALS as " This is a 'superglobal', or automatic global, 
>> variable. "
>>
>> gotta love the php manual
>
> Exactly Kevin. What the OP wanted was to create another superglobal, just 
> like $GLOBALS. The contents of $GLOBALS refer to the global variables, 
> which are *not* all superglobals. The only superglobals by default in PHP 
> (apart from $GLOBALS) are $_SERVER, $_GET, $_POST, and so on.
>
> He asked a question, and I provided the answer. Why he wants to do it is 
> another question, but telling him to "use $GLOBALS" isn't answering his 
> question, it's answering a different question, namely how to access the 
> global variables.
>
> Jasper 

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