You also may have trouble if you use a name varible same with key of session
$_SESSION["foo"] = "fuzzy";
$foo = 'Song';
In a few system, $_SESSION['foo'] will have result: Song if register_global = ON
$_SESSION
$HTTP_SESSION_VARS [deprecated]
$_SESSION -- $HTTP_SESSION_VARS [deprecated] — Session variables
Description
An associative array containing session variables available to the current script. See the Session functions documentation for more information on how this is used.
$HTTP_SESSION_VARS contains the same initial information, but is not a superglobal. (Note that $HTTP_SESSION_VARS and $_SESSION are different variables and that PHP handles them as such)
ChangeLog
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 4.1.0 | Introduced $_SESSION that the deprecated $HTTP_SESSION_VARS. |
Notes
Note: This is a 'superglobal', or automatic global, variable. This simply means that it is available in all scopes throughout a script. There is no need to do global $variable; to access it within functions or methods.
$_SESSION
Anonymous
22-Aug-2008 12:28
22-Aug-2008 12:28
Steve Clay
17-Aug-2008 09:28
17-Aug-2008 09:28
Unlike a real PHP array, $_SESSION keys at the root level must be valid variable names.
<?php
$_SESSION[1][1] = 'cake'; // fails
$_SESSION['v1'][1] = 'cake'; // works
?>
I imagine this is an internal limitation having to do with the legacy function session_register(), where the registered global var must similarly have a valid name.
jherry at netcourrier dot com
02-Aug-2008 07:16
02-Aug-2008 07:16
You may have trouble if you use '|' in the key:
$_SESSION["foo|bar"] = "fuzzy";
This does not work for me. I think it's because the serialisation of session object is using this char so the server reset your session when it cannot read it.
To make it work I replaced '|' by '_'.
