ID: 26662 Updated by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reported By: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Status: Open +Status: Bogus Bug Type: CGI related Operating System: Linux PHP Version: PHP 5.0.1 (cli) New Comment:
Still wrong version and category and can't reproduce -> bogus. Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-08-31 18:02:55] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Updated version, changed category. php -r '${1} = "foo"; echo ${1}, "\n";' still outputs foo. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2003-12-19 07:54:23] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Then you should set the version correctly, and category.. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2003-12-18 21:42:28] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Please do not submit the same bug more than once. An existing bug report already describes this very problem. Even if you feel that your issue is somewhat different, the resolution is likely to be the same. Thank you for your interest in PHP. Dupe of bug #26601 which is marked won't fix. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2003-12-18 21:25:21] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Confirmed this bug is in PHP 5 B3RC1 as well. It gets worse, you can put whatever you want in ${} and it'll take it just fine... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2003-12-18 21:06:52] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Description: ------------ It is possible to set variables that start with numbers. I reproduced this with a PHP 4.3.x-dev snapshot AND PHP 5.0.0b2 (I was unable to get a snap to compile. autoconf errors out the wazoo). Reproduce code: --------------- [EMAIL PROTECTED] cli $ ./php -r '${1} = "foo"; echo ${1}, "\n";' foo Expected result: ---------------- A parse error Actual result: -------------- Outputs 'foo' ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=26662&edit=1