Giving my function access to outside variable

$foo = 42;
$bar = function($x = 0) use ($foo){
    return $x + $foo;
};
var_dump($bar(10)); // int(52)

UPDATE: there is now support for arrow functions, but i will let for someone that used it more to create the answer


By default, when you are inside a function, you do not have access to the outer variables.


If you want your function to have access to an outer variable, you have to declare it as global, inside the function :

function someFuntion(){
    global $myArr;
    $myVal = //some processing here to determine value of $myVal
    $myArr[] = $myVal;
}

For more informations, see Variable scope.

But note that using global variables is not a good practice : with this, your function is not independant anymore.


A better idea would be to make your function return the result :

function someFuntion(){
    $myArr = array();       // At first, you have an empty array
    $myVal = //some processing here to determine value of $myVal
    $myArr[] = $myVal;      // Put that $myVal into the array
    return $myArr;
}

And call the function like this :

$result = someFunction();


Your function could also take parameters, and even work on a parameter passed by reference :

function someFuntion(array & $myArr){
    $myVal = //some processing here to determine value of $myVal
    $myArr[] = $myVal;      // Put that $myVal into the array
}

Then, call the function like this :

$myArr = array( ... );
someFunction($myArr);  // The function will receive $myArr, and modify it

With this :

  • Your function received the external array as a parameter
  • And can modify it, as it's passed by reference.
  • And it's better practice than using a global variable : your function is a unit, independant of any external code.


For more informations about that, you should read the Functions section of the PHP manual, and,, especially, the following sub-sections :

  • Functions arguments
  • Returning values