You can take advantage of the fact that PHP will dereference the results of a function call.
Here's some example code I whipped up:
$x = 'x';
$y = 'y';
$arr = array(&$x,&$y);
print_r($arr);
echo "<br/>";
$arr2 = $arr;
$arr2[0] = 'zzz';
print_r($arr);
print_r($arr2);
echo "<br/>";
$arr2 = array_flip(array_flip($arr));
$arr2[0] = '123';
print_r($arr);
print_r($arr2);
The results look like this:
Array ( [0] => x [1] => y )
Array ( [0] => zzz [1] => y ) Array ( [0] => zzz [1] => y )
Array ( [0] => zzz [1] => y ) Array ( [0] => 123 [1] => y )
You can see that the results of using array_flip()
during the assigment of $arr
to $arr2
results in differences in the subsequent changes to $arr2
, as the array_flip()
calls forces a dereference.
It doesn't seem terribly efficient, but it might work for you if $this->x->getResults()
is returning an array:
$data['x'] = array_flip(array_flip($this->x->getResults()));
$data['y'] = $data['x'];
See this (unanswered) thread for another example.
If everything in your returned array is an object however, then the only way to copy an object is to use clone()
, and you would have to iterate through $data['x']
and clone each element into $data['y']
.
Example:
$data['x'] = $this->x->getResults();
$data['y'] = array();
foreach($data['x'] as $key => $obj) {
$data['y'][$key] = clone $obj;
}
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