WeberDev.com PHP and MySQL Code

LOG IN
BEGINNER GUIDES  |  PHP CLASSES  |  CODE SEARCH  |  ARTICLES SEARCH  |  PHP FORUMS  |  PHP MANUAL  |  PHP FUNCTIONS LIST  |  WEB SITE TEMPLATES
Start typing to search for PHP and MySQL Code Snippets and Articles Search
Submit a code Example / Snippet Submit Your Code
Search Engine Optimization Monitor SEO Monitor
Web Site UpTime Monitor UpTime Monitor
WeberDev's Monthly code contest PHP Code Contest
Your Personal Examples List My Favorite Examples
Your Personal Articles List My Favorite Articles
Edit Account Info Update Your Profile
PHP Code Search
Web Development Forums
Learn MySQL Playing Trivia
PHPBB2 Templates
Web Development Index
PHP Web Logs (BLogs)
Web Development Resources
Web Development Content
PHPClasses
PHP Editor
PHP Jobs
Vision.To Design
Ajax Tutorials
PHP Programming Help
PHP/MySQL Programming
Webmaster Resources
Webmaster Forum
XML meta language
website builder
Submit Site
Forex Trading Online forex trading platform
Dumps a string representation of an internal zend value to output

debug_zval_dump

(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5)

debug_zval_dump — Dumps a string representation of an internal zend value to output

Description

void debug_zval_dump ( mixed $variable )

Dumps a string representation of an internal zend value to output.

Parameters

variable

The variable being evaluated.

Return Values

No value is returned.

Examples

Example #1 debug_zval_dump() example

<?php
$var1 
'Hello World';
$var2 '';

$var2 =& $var1;

debug_zval_dump(&$var1);
?>

The above example will output:

 
 &string(11) "Hello World" refcount(3) 

Note: Beware the refcount The refcount value returned by this function is non-obvious in certain circumstances. For example, a developer might expect the above example to indicate a refcount of 2. The third reference is created when actually calling debug_zval_dump().
This behavior is further compounded when a variable is not passed to debug_zval_dump() by reference. To illustrate, consider a slightly modified version of the above example:

<?php
$var1 
'Hello World';
$var2 '';

$var2 =& $var1;

debug_zval_dump($var1); // not passed by reference, this time
?>

The above example will output:

 
 string(11) "Hello World" refcount(1) 

Why refcount(1)? Because a copy of $var1 is being made, when the function is called.
This function becomes even more confusing when a variable with a refcount of 1 is passed (by copy/value):
<?php
$var1 
'Hello World';

debug_zval_dump($var1);
?>

The above example will output:

 
 string(11) "Hello World" refcount(2) 

A refcount of 2, here, is extremely non-obvious. Especially considering the above examples. So what's happening?
When a variable has a single reference (as did $var1 before it was used as an argument to debug_zval_dump()), PHP's engine optimizes the manner in which it is passed to a function. Internally, PHP treats $var1 like a reference (in that the refcount is increased for the scope of this function), with the caveat that if the passed reference happens to be written to, a copy is made, but only at the moment of writing. This is known as "copy on write."
So, if debug_zval_dump() happened to write to its sole parameter (and it doesn't), then a copy would be made. Until then, the parameter remains a reference, causing the refcount to be incremented to 2 for the scope of the function call.