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Posted by Michael Fesser on 01/22/08 19:40
..oO(davidgregan@gmail.com)
>Hi, I'm fairly new to PHP and I have a question regarding pointers.
>Below is an example binary tree implementation I found in the
>internet. It works great but I'm not sure how it works. Here's what
>I'm confused about, in the insert function the variable $pointer is
>set to $this->tree. Now, my current understanding is that after this
>the variable $pointer will contain the data from $this-> tree.
Nope. The tree is built with objects and objects in PHP 5 are always
addressed by a kind of reference (internally it's just a numeric handle
that identifies the object). So with
$pointer = $this->tree;
both variables simply reference the same root node of the tree. There's
still only one tree of objects.
>However, as the function continues $pointer is set to pointer->left
>(or right) until the correct index is found. at this point the value
>is added to the tree with $pointer->left=new leaf.
>
>In this case the value of pointer seems to be referencing a position
>in the $tree variable
Correct.
>instead of merely containing the data of $tree
>as I would expect. Furthermore, when $pointer->left is set to a new
>leaf, it is actually added to $tree and not just to $pointer.
Correct. $pointer always references a node of the tree. All of them are
of the class 'leaf' and have the defined properties. So regardless which
node is referenced by the $pointer variable, there's always a $data,
$left and $right property.
>So my
>question is, why is this variable behaving like a pointer in this case
>instead of just containing the value of tree?
Try to understand how objects are handled and addressed in PHP 5:
$foo = new Test();
$bar = $foo;
The first line creates a new object and assigns its internal number (the
object handle, for example 42) to $foo, hence $foo kinda references the
object with the internal number 42.
The second line simply copies the number stored in $foo to $bar, so now
both variables have the same value and therefore reference the same
object. The object itself is never copied unless you explicitly clone
it:
$foo = new Test();
$bar = clone $foo;
Now both variables reference _different_ objects.
Micha
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