This is the code & its output I used to draw the inference below:
 class a {
    public $var1;
    public $var2;
    }
 $obj0 = new a;
 var_dump($obj0);
 class b {
    public $var1;
    public $var2;
    public $var3;
    }
 $obj1 = new b;
 var_dump($obj1);
 $obj2 = new stdClass;
 var_dump($obj2);
 $obj3 = new stdClass;
 var_dump($obj3); 
 $obj4 = new stdClass;
 var_dump($obj4);
 $obj5 = new stdClass;
 var_dump($obj5);
 var_dump(new stdClass); 
 $obj6 = new stdClass;
 var_dump($obj6);  
The output:
object(a)#1 (2) {
  ["var1"]=> NULL
  ["var2"]=> NULL
}
object(b)#2 (3) {
  ["var1"]=> NULL
  ["var2"]=> NULL
  ["var3"]=> NULL
}
object(stdClass)#3 (0) {
}
object(stdClass)#4 (0) {
}
object(stdClass)#5 (0) {
}
object(stdClass)#6 (0) {
}
object(stdClass)#7 (0) {
}
object(stdClass)#7 (0) {
}
The #<some-number> next to the line object(someClass) in var_dump of an object is actually #<count>. Where,
count is the number of objects / zval's for objects irrespective of which class it belongs to that has been created till now. Which keeps getting incrementing for every object created & gets decremented by 1 when a refcount of a zval reaches zero i.e. Garbage Collection.
Am I right?
That number is Z_OBJ_HANDLE_PP(struc) where struc is a zval which leads to Z_OBJVAL(zval).handle which leads to (zval).value.obj.
See as well http://php.net/manual/en/internals2.variables.intro.php
In short I would say it's the object identifier written in decimal form (ref):
php_printf("%sobject(%s)#%d (%d) {\n", COMMON, class_name, Z_OBJ_HANDLE_PP(struc), myht ? zend_hash_num_elements(myht) : 0);
And not the count of objects ever created.
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