Returning by-reference is useful when you want to use a function
    to find which variable a reference should be bound to. Do
    not use return-by-reference to increase performance, the
    engine is smart enough to optimize this on its own. Only return references
    when you have a valid technical reason to do it! To
    return references, use this syntax:
    
    In this example, the property of the object returned by the
    
find_var function would be set, not the
    copy, as it would be without using reference syntax.
   
Note: 
     Unlike parameter passing, here you have to use
     & in both places - to indicate that you
     return by-reference, not a copy as usual, and to indicate that
     reference binding, rather than usual assignment, should be done
     for $foo.
    
Note: 
     If you try to return a reference from a function with the syntax:
     return ($found_var); this will not
     work as you are attempting to return the result of an
     expression, and not a variable, by reference. You can
     only return variables by reference from a function - nothing else.
     E_NOTICE error is issued since PHP 4.4.0 and PHP
     5.1.0 if the code tries to return a dynamic expression or a result of the
     new operator.