On Wed, 2006-07-26 at 22:29, Michael B Allen wrote:
> Is a function return value copied? If the value is an integer I suppose
> it is but what about a string or an array? If you pass by reference is
> the return value still copied?
> 
> For example, is this:
> 
>   function foo(&$arr) {
>       $arr[] = "bar";
>   }
> 
> faster than this?
> 
>   function foo(&$arr) {
>       $arr[] = "bar";
>       return $arr; // is this copied?
>   }
> 
> I'm working on some code that would be called to generate a cell in a
> possibly large table and therefore a small difference in performance
> may have a significant impact.

PHP uses copy-on-write and so copies are essentially shared until such
time as you modify one of them. If you don't need references then copies
are faster than references.

Cheers,
Rob.
-- 
.------------------------------------------------------------.
| InterJinn Application Framework - http://www.interjinn.com |
:------------------------------------------------------------:
| An application and templating framework for PHP. Boasting  |
| a powerful, scalable system for accessing system services  |
| such as forms, properties, sessions, and caches. InterJinn |
| also provides an extremely flexible architecture for       |
| creating re-usable components quickly and easily.          |
`------------------------------------------------------------'

-- 
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to