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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T15:47:06+00:00 2026-05-15T15:47:06+00:00

i’ve been thinking if something like this is possible. // this creates a variable

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i’ve been thinking if something like this is possible.

// this creates a variable $test in the scope it was called from
function create_var() {}

class A {
  function test()
  {
    create_var();
    // now we have a local to var() method variable $test
    echo $test;
  }
}

So, the question is, can a function create_var() create a variable outside of its scope, but not in a global scope? Example would be the extract() function – it takes an array and creates variables in the scope it was called from.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T15:47:07+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 3:47 pm

    Nope, this is not possible. It’s possible only to access the global scope from within a function.

    You could make create_var() return an associative array. You could extract() that in your function:

    function create_var() 
     { return array("var1" => "value1", "var2" => "value2"); }
    
    class A {
    function test()
    {
        extract(create_var());
        // now we have a local to var() method variable $test
        echo $test;
    }
    }
    

    Something a bit closer to what you want to do is possible in PHP 5.3 using the new closures feature. That requires declaring the variables beforehand, though, so it doesn’t really apply. The same goes for passing variable references to create_var(): create_var(&$variable1, &$variable2, &$variable3....)

    A word of warning: I can think of no situation where any of this would be the best coding practice. Be careful when using extract() because of the indiscriminate importing of variables that it performs. It is mostly better to work without it.

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