ID:               18480
 Updated by:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reported By:      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Status:           Open
 Bug Type:         Documentation problem
 Operating System: all
 PHP Version:      4.2.1
 New Comment:

That's not a different use though.  You are simply creating a global
variable in one function and accessing it in another.  I don't think
this patch clarifies anything.  Perhaps the fact that you can create
global variables inside a function is not documented well enough, but a
much simpler documentation fix can take care of that.


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-07-22 18:47:58] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

One of the uses of "global $var;" seems not to be documented. Here's a
tiny patch to fix that.

--beginning--
Index: en/language/variables.xml
===================================================================
RCS file: /repository/phpdoc/en/language/variables.xml,v
retrieving revision 1.52
diff -u -u -r1.52 variables.xml
--- en/language/variables.xml   3 Jul 2002 22:51:23 -0000       1.52
+++ en/language/variables.xml   22 Jul 2002 22:34:16 -0000
@@ -380,6 +380,47 @@
    </simpara>
 
    <simpara>
+    Please note that if you want to access in your function to a
variable
+    which is in another function, all that through a global variable,
+    you'll need to declare it as a variable in the two functions.
+    An example, always with our function Sum():
+   </simpara>
+
+   <informalexample>
+    <programlisting role="php">
+<![CDATA[
+<?php
+
+function KeepVariables()
+{
+    global $a, $b;
+
+    $a = 1;
+    $b = 2;
+}
+
+function Sum()
+{
+    global $a, $b;
+
+    $b = $a + $b;
+} 
+
+KeepVariables();
+Sum();
+echo $b;
+?>
+]]>
+    </programlisting>
+   </informalexample>
+
+   <simpara>
+    If we hadn't declared <varname>$a</varname> and
<varname>$b</vargame>
+    as globals in the KeepVariables() function, the script would have
+    displayed nothing.
+   </simpara>
+
+   <simpara>
     A second way to access variables from the global scope is to use
     the special PHP-defined <varname>$GLOBALS</varname> array.  The
     previous example can be rewritten as:

--end--

If it can be useful, I can also write a french version of it, since I'm
french.

HTH.

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


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Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=18480&edit=1


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