convert $var of function to string? - php

My goal just debug
function dbg($var){
echo "you have passed $var";
}
call dbg($test)
output:
you have passed test
call dbg("var")
output:
you have passed "var"
In php .anyone could help me to do that?

Try this if $var is a global variable:
function dbg($var){
echo "you have passed {$GLOBALS[$var]}";
}

Well, the second case is fairly straightforward - you're passing a string and you want to display the string. No worries.
But for the first case, I'm afraid the answer is: No you can't.
Once inside the function, PHP doesn't know anything about the variable that was passed into it other than the value.
I can't really see that it would be of much value though. It would be trivial to change your code to pass in a name and a value -- ie something like this:
function dbg($name,$value) {
print "You passed $name, and the value was $value";
}
dbg('test',$test);
That's not really all that great either though -- you may as well just use print_r() and friends.
If you really want more powerful debugging tools, you should look into xDebug. It's a proper debugging tool for PHP, which allows you to step through the code line-by-line, and see the contents of variables at any point during the program run (among many other good features). It also integrates nicely with several popular IDEs.

Related

How To Parse a Constant in PHP

Is it possible to parse the contents of a constant in PHP?
For example,
define('WHO_AM_I', 'My name is $_SESSION['who_am_i'].'); // setup the constant string
echo eval(WHO_AM_I); // something like this -- but the eval() returns an error
Please note that I do not know the value of the _SESSION var until I actually use the constant later in the script stream.
Thanks.
AMENDED WITH REASON FOR WANTING TO DO THIS
I want to pull "hard coding" out of my script and give the user the ability to configure certain taxonomy in their site. So while I was doing this I also wanted to create a quasi-dynamic constant that I thought I might be able to parse later in the script.
If it can't be done...then it can't be done.
Don't shoot me for asking the question though.
A FINAL COMMENT TO AVOID ALL THIS CONFUSION
The purpose of my question has nothing to do with the eval() function. I am actually regretting having put it in there in the first place.
I put the eval() in the question simply to demonstrate to stackoverflow members that I did a bit if prep on my question rather than asking an open ended -- hey give me a solution without having offered any stab at it myself. So please disregard the eval().
All I want to know is can I somehow craft a define() in an way that makes the assigned value parse-able later in my script. That's it, that's all.
AMENDMENT C
I know I can do the following although I don't want to do it this way:
define('PARSE_ABLE_CONSTANT_PART_A', 'My name is ');
define('PARSE_ABLE_CONSTANT_PART_B', '.');
...later down the script road...
echo PARSE_ABLE_CONSTANT_PART_A . $_SESSION['who_am_i'] . PARSE_ABLE_CONSTANT_PART_B;
I just don't want to do it this way if I can make it slicker using an embedded var in the constant.
This seems really fishy, as other users have pointed out. You could do something like this if you wanted:
define('WHO_AM_I', 'echo \'My name is \'.$_SESSION[\'who_am_i\'];');
eval(WHO_AM_I);
This will always just echo the variable. You need to eval an expression afaik.
Just read your edit. I think you would be better suited with an .ini file, or maybe a static class with static properties. Makes it much more flexible, and you avoid the eval. You are talking user-generated content from what I can see - subjecting that to an eval call seems highly insecure.
A quick example of a static class you could use:
<?php
class myConstants{
public static function _($key){
switch($key){
case "WHO_AM_I":
return "My name is ".$_SESSION['who_am_i'];
break;
case "OTHER_CONSTANT":
// does some other evaluation and returns a string
break;
}
throw new Exception("Constant isn't defined");
}
}
?>
Then you can just echo myConstants::_('WHO_AM_I');
Constants by definition don't allow you to set it with dynamic content.
Here is a quote from the php manual:
As the name suggests, that value cannot change during the execution
of the script
You can see more by going here
You might be thinking of magical constants

How to set a variable in the caller scope, like the extract() function

I know that directly setting a variable in the scope of caller is probably not a good idea.
However, the PHP extract() function does exactly that! I would like to write my own version of extract() but cannot figure out how to actually go about setting the variables in the caller. Any ideas?
The closest I have come is modifying the caller's args using debug_backtrace(), but this is not exactly the same thing...
You can't modify local variables in a parent scope - the method which extract() uses is not exposed by PHP.
Also, what you get back from debug_stacktrace() isn't magically linked to the real stack. You can't modify it and hope your modifications are live!
You could only do it in a PHP extension. If you call an internal PHP function, it will not run in a new PHP scope (i.e., no new symbol table will be created). Therefore, you can modify the "parent scope" by changing the global EG(active_symbol_table).
Basically, the core of the function would do something like extract does, the core of which is:
if (!EG(active_symbol_table)) {
zend_rebuild_symbol_table(TSRMLS_C);
}
//loop through the given array
ZEND_SET_SYMBOL_WITH_LENGTH(EG(active_symbol_table),
Z_STRVAL(final_name), Z_STRLEN(final_name) + 1, data, 1, 0);
There are, however, a few nuances. See the implementation of extract, but keep in mind a function that did what you wanted wouldn't need to be as complex; most of the code in extract is there to deal with the several options it accepts.
You can abuse the $GLOBALS scope to read and write variables from the caller of your function. See below sample function, which reads and write variables from the caller scope.
And yes, I know its dirty to abuse the $GLOBAL scope, but hey, we're here to fix problems ain't we? :)
function set_first_name($firstname) {
/* check if $firstname is defined in caller */
if(array_key_exists('firstname', $GLOBALS)) {
$firstname_was = $GLOBALS['firstname'];
} else {
$firstname_was = 'undefined';
}
/* set $firstname in caller */
$GLOBALS['firstname'] = $firstname;
/* show onscreen confirmation for debugging */
echo '<br>firstname was ' . $firstname_was . ' and now is: ' . $firstname;
}
set_first_name('John');
set_first_name('Michael');
The function returns the following output:
<br>firstname was undefined and now is: John
<br>firstname was John and now is: Michael
It depends on how badly you need to do this. If it's only for source beauty, find another way. If, for some reason, you really need to mess with parent scope, there's always a way.
SOLUTION 1
The safest method would be to actually use extract itself for this job, since it knows the trick. Say you want to make a function that extracts elements of an array but with all the names backwards - pretty weird! -, let's do this with a simple array-to-array transformation:
function backwardNames($x) {
$out = [];
foreach($x as $key=>$val) {
$rev = strrev($key);
$out[$rev] = $val;
}
return $out;
}
extract(backwardNames($myArray));
No magic here.
SOLUTION 2
If you need more than what extract does, use eval and var_export. YES I KNOW I KNOW everybody calm down please. No, eval is not evil. Eval is a power tool and it can be dangerous if you use it without care - so use it with care. (There is no way to go wrong if you only eval something that's been generated by var_export - it doesn't give any way to intrusions even if you put values in your array from an untrusted source. Array elements behave well.)
function makeMyVariables() {
$vars = [
"a" => 4,
"b" => 5,
];
$out = var_export($vars,1);
$out = "extract(".$out.");";
return $out;
}
eval(makeMyVariables()); // this is how you call it
// now $a is 4, $b is 5
This is almost the same, except that you can do a lot more in eval. And it's significantly slower, of course.
However, indeed, there is no way to do it with a single call.

Find what functions were called (from a variable's perspective)

I'm trying to figure out how to know what has been done to a variable.
Here's an example:
function a($hello) {
$out .= strtoupper(ucwords(strtolower($hello)));
return $out;
}
echo function_trace('$hello') // returns array(strtoupper,ucwords,strtolower)
Thanks!
Matt
There's not really an easy way to do this, because variables don't store "state" or "history". Stack traces (where you probably got your inspiration from) are possible because they're generated from the existing execution stack, which is stored out of necessity to be able to properly unwind chains of function calls.
In addition, your example is trying to trace a function parameter - but that parameter variable is only defined within the scope of the function. Attempting to reference it outside of the function would result in the interpreter not knowing what variable you're trying to indicate - it'd think you're looking for a globally-scoped $hello, not the one used as an argument in the function.
There's no hook in PHP that does exactly what you want, but you can get a call stack with debug_backtrace():
http://php.net/manual/en/function.debug-backtrace.php
It's not possible to do exactly what you're asking for, but perhaps if you gave a bit more context about what you were hoping to do with that function trace, we could give some suggestions?

Proper way to declare a function in PHP?

I am not really clear about declaring functions in php, so I will give this a try.
getselection();
function getselection($selection,$price)
{
global $getprice;
switch($selection)
{
case1: case 1:
echo "You chose lemondew <br />";
$price=$getprice['lemondew'].'<br>';
echo "The price:".$price;
break;
Please let me know if I am doing this wrong, I want to do this the correct way; in addition, php.net has examples but they are kind of complex for a newb, I guess when I become proficient I will start using their documentation, thank you for not flaming.
Please provide links that might also help me clear this up?
Your example seems valid enough to me.
foo('bar');
function foo($myVar)
{
echo $myVar
}
// Output: bar
See this link for more info on user-defined functions.
You got off to a reasonable start. Now all you need to do is remove the redundant case 1:, close your switch statement with a } and then close your function with another }. I assume the global array $getprice is defined in your code but not shown in the question.
it's good practice to declare functions before calling them. It'll prevent infrequent misbehavior from your code.
The sample is basically a valid function definition (meaning it runs, except for what Asaph mentions about closing braces), but doesn't follow best practices.
Naming conventions: When a name consists of two or more words, use camelCase or underscores_to_delineate_words. Which one you use isn't important, so long as you're consistent. See also Alex's question about PHP naming conventions.
Picking a good name: a "get" prefix denotes a "getter" or "accessor"; any method or function of the form "getThing" should return a thing and have no affects visible outside the function or object. The sample function might be better called "printSelection" or "printItem", since it prints the name and price of the item that was selected.
Globals: Generally speaking, globals cause problems. One alternative is to use classes or objects: make the variable a static member of a class or an instance member of an object. Another alternative is to pass the data as an additional parameter to the function, though a function with too many parameters isn't very readable.
Switches are very useful, but not always the best choice. In the sample, $selection could easily hold the name of an item rather than a number. This points to one alternative to using switches: use an index into an array (which, incidentally, is how it's done in Python). If the cases have the same code but vary in values used, arrays are the way to go. If you're using objects, then polymorphism is the way to go--but that's a topic unto itself.
The $price parameter appears to serve no purpose. If you want your function to return the price, use a return statement.
When you called the function, you neglected to pass any arguments. This will result in warnings and notices, but will run.

What is the best way to capture data returned from a function in PHP?

I am new to programming and learning with Wordpress.
the_title(); //outputs the title of the page
I want to capture the title of the page into a string variable so I can manipulate it with strtolower and str_replace functions.
The only way I have gotten it to work is with output buffering.
ob_start();
the_title();
$result = ob_get_clean();
echo str_replace(" ","-",strtolower($result));
/*there has got to be an easier way....
i dont fully understand why */
str_replace(" ","-",strtolower(the_title()));
What am I doing wrong?
If what you really are looking for is the wp_title function, the 2nd argument it takes is a boolean on whether or not it should display it or return it. Pass it false so it will return it to the var, then you can do this:
$mytitle = wp_title(null, false);
Otherwise, your only option is to find the function you're looking for and modify the source code.
There is no easier way. Your function does not return the string, it prints it, therefore you will have to use output buffering if you want to capture the output.
It's the difference between f1() and f2() in the following example.
// Returns a string, prints nothing.
function f1() {
return "String";
}
// Prints a string, returns nothing.
function f2() {
echo "String";
}
Wordpress is a HORRIBLE app to learn how to program from. It uses these global functions that "just work" but they do very specific tasks "inside 'The Loop'". As I say, this is a horrible example of what good code should be.
Thankfully (for you) there are other functions that just return the part you're looking for. Rather than me just writing what you need, you can read a full listing here. Take care that you note down which must be within the mythical Loop and which you can use anywhere.
As it happens there are even more ways to get the title, but I was really imagining for this example you would do something like:
$this_post = get_post($post); // I *think* $post is the post ID inside the loop though I could be wrong
echo $this_post->post_title;
But as another poster (correctly) says you can use a fairly simple wp_title() function to grab the current loop title.
This brings me back to perhaps wanting to explain why learning programming from Wordpress is a bad idea. They have so many damned way of doing the same damned thing that it's almost impossible to keep on top of things.
A blog is a really simple set of data (even moreso in WP's case because it isn't fully normalised) but rather than just having one way to output a title <?php echo $post->title; ?> you have umpteen ways, all doing subtly different things.
If you really want to learn how to program (instead of hacking your way around the crap that is the WP internals), creating a simple blog engine is fairly quick and fun... It's certainly how a lot of people get into a new language or framework.
And if you really want to have fun, have a look at Django.
Enough of the Wordpress rant. If you're fighting something like this in the future that doesn't have 100 ways of doing it, I really wouldn't recommend output-buffer-capturing. It uses up a whole buttload of resources for something relatively simple.
The easiest way can be as simple as just taking the source for the original function, sticking it in a new function and replacing the echo with return.
Just note there may be some database connectivity to handle that returning prematurely may break... So if the echo isn't the last statement, instead of returning right there, store the string as a variable and return at the end of the function.
just figured Id share my final solution with you guys.
This was to give my body tags unique id's in wordpress.*/
$title =wp_title(null,false);
echo strtolower(str_replace(' ','-',ltrim($title)));
//without the ltrim() 2 dashes are created before the title.
Almost every 'the_*' function in Wordpress has a 'get_the_*' counterpart. So, you just have to use
echo str_replace(" ","-",get_the_title());
And it's going to work like a charm. there's also get_the_excerpt(), get_the_content() and the_permalink() which somehow breaks the naming convention (God knows how many times I've written "get_the_permalink()" and got frustrated on why it didn't work)
Cheers!

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