I'm having some trouble creating a "super object" (similar to that of CodeIgniter) for a framework project I'm working on.
I want to make a super object that all of my other classes will run through. I did that, but it seems I am unable to use my super object's object in each of my classes without using the global keyword in every function.
I have something like this:
class a
{
function aa()
{
return 'class a';
}
}
class b
{
function bb()
{
$blah->a->aa();
}
}
class superobj
{
function loadClass($class)
{
$this->$class = new $class;
}
}
class blah extends superobj
{
function __construct()
{
$this->loadClass('a');
$this->loadClass('b');
}
}
$blah = new $blah;
So if I run this, I get an error because I can't access the aa method. If I put global $blah into the method bb, then it works (or at least in my real project it does, I dunno about this 5 second mockup hehe).
So is there any way to either make the $blah object global so that I don't need to reference it for every method, OR is there a better way to achieve what I am trying to do?
I'm not very good at OOP...
function bb() {
$blah->a->aa();
}
Indeed, as with any function, this function has no variables in its scope. $blah was neither passed to the function nor is it defined in the function, so it doesn't exist.
If your objects depend on an instance of blah to work, you should pass it to the constructor.
class b {
var $blah = null;
function __construct($blah) {
$this->blah = $blah;
}
function bb() {
$this->blah->foo();
}
}
$b = new b($instanceOfBlah);
Alternatively, use a static class that holds references to global objects and returns them on request (Registry pattern, like $blah = Registry::get('blah')).
Don't use global. Just don't.
Related
Using as an example the class defined here
class Testclass {
private $testvar = "default value";
public function setTestvar($testvar) {
$this->testvar = $testvar;
}
public function getTestvar() {
return $this->testvar;
}
function dosomething()
{
echo $this->getTestvar();
}
}
$Testclass = new Testclass();
$Testclass->setTestvar("another value");
$Testclass->dosomething();
I would like to add inside a function "one more value", like this:
function test_function() {
$Testclass->setTestvar("one more value");
}
But it doesn´t work. I gives the error message undefined variable Testclass. In order to make it work, I have to define the variable as global within the function, like this:
function test_function() {
global Testclass;
$Testclass->setTestvar("one more value");
}
I am quite new to PHP, but it seems rather strange to me this way of using it. From the main PHP file it´s already defined, but when I use it from a function I have to define again.Basically what I am trying to do is to create a class that creates a new file and adds strings to it from different functions. Is there not a better way? Any suggestions? Many thanks in advance.
One way is to use singleton
MyClass::getInstance()->doSomethingUsefull();
Sometimes you can use static method
MyClass::doIt();
Functions have their own private variable scope. So (for example) you can use $i in a function without worrying about it screwing up another $i somewhere else in the program. If you want to have a function perform actions on an already-existing object, just pass the object as a parameter to the function:
function test_function(Testclass $testclass)
{
$testclass->setTestvar("one more value");
}
Then call it with your object:
$Testclass = new Testclass();
test_function($Testclass);
Note: If the functions you're defining outside the class are tightly related to the class, then you probably want to define them as methods inside the class instead of separate stand-alone functions.
<?php
class A {
var $varA;
function funcA() {
$this->varA='AAAA';
$bbb = new B();
$bbb->funcB();
}
}
class B {
function funcB() {
//### Is there any way to get value of $varA from here?
}
}
echo $aaa->funcA;
?>
Please see the code above. Is there any way to get value of $varA from funcB()? I know about global and I know I can pass it or add var $varB; to the B class and set it. I am asking is there any standard way (syntax) to just get the value?
You could make the variable in class A public and static, which would make it accessible using A::$varA.
class A {
public static $varA;
function funcA() {
self::$varA = 'AAAA';
$bbb = new B();
$bbb->funcB();
}
}
class B {
function funcB() {
// Get value of $varA from A statically
echo A::$varA;
}
}
However, I wouldn't recommend doing it this way, as order of operations becomes more important. I'd look at traditional public getters/setters and take a look at possible desing flaws leading you to needing this solution in the first place.
I have a class that generates data based on a few things. I would like to format that data from the outside. So I am trying to pass a function into the class so that it would format that data. I have looked at many examples, but it seems this is unique.
Can anybody give an idea of how to do this? The following code gives an error.
<?php
class someClass {
var $outsideFunc; // placeholder for function to be defined from outside
var $somevar='Me'; // generated text
function echoarg($abc){
$outsideFunc=$this->outsideFunc; // bring the outside function in
call_user_func($outsideFunc,$abc); // execute outside function on text
echo $abc;
}
}
function outsidefunc($param){ // define custom function
$param='I am '.$param;
}
$someClass=new someClass();
$someClass -> outsideFunc = 'outsideFunc'; // send custom function into Class
$someClass -> echoarg($someClass->somevar);
$someClass -> outsidefunc = 'outsidefunc';
In PHP, function names are not case sensitive, yet object property names are. You need $someClass->outsideFunc, not $someClass->outsidefunc.
Note that good OOP design practice calls for the use of getter and setter methods rather than just accessing properties directly from outside code. Also note that PHP 5.3 introduced support for anonymous functions.
Yeah. You are right. Now there is no error. But it does not work either.
By default, PHP does not pass arguments by reference; outsidefunc() does not actually do anything useful. If you want it to set $param in the caller to something else, and do not want to just return the new value, you could change the function signature to look like this:
function outsidefunc(&$param) {
You would also need to change the way you call the function, as call_user_func() does not allow you to pass arguments by reference. Either of these ways should work:
$outsideFunc($abc);
call_user_func_array($outsideFunc, array(&$abc));
Why not pass your function as an argument?
<?php
class someClass {
public $somevar="Me";
public function echoarg($abc,$cb=null) {
if( $cb) $cb($abc);
echo $abc;
}
}
$someClass = new someClass();
$someClass->echoarg($someClass->somevar,function(&$a) {$a = "I am ".$a;});
i am not sure what exactly you are looking for, but what i get is, you want to pass object in a function which can be acheive by
Type Hinting in PHP.
class MyClass {
public $var = 'Hello World';
}
function myFunction(MyClass $foo) {
echo $foo->var;
}
$myclass = new MyClass;
myFunction($myclass);
OP, perhaps closures are what you're looking for?
It doesn't do EXACTLY what you're looking for (actually add function to class), but can be added to a class variable and executed like any normal anonymous function.
$myClass->addFunc(function($arg) { return 'test: ' . $arg });
$myClass->execFunc(0);
class myClass {
protected $funcs;
public function addFunc(closure $func) {
$this->funcs[] = $func;
}
public function execFunc($index) { $this->funcs[$index](); } // obviously, do some checking here first.
}
Is it possible to add methods to functions?
For example:
<?
function func(){
;
}
//add method
func->test = function(){
;
}
func->test();
func();
I'm coming from a javascript background, and therefore I'm used to 'everything is an object'.
EDIT:
I was just explaining where the misconception may often come from for new phpers. I understand the above code doesn't work.
EDIT 2
Figured it out.
class myfunc_class{
function __invoke(){
//function body
}
function __call($closure, $args)
{
call_user_func_array($this->$closure, $args);
}
}
$func = new myfunc_class;
$func->test = function(){
echo '<br>test<br>';
};
$func->test();
$func();
Even sexier :)
class func{
public $_function;
function __invoke(){
return call_user_func_array($this->_function,func_get_args());
}
function __construct($fun){
$this->_function = $fun;
}
function __call($closure, $args)
{
call_user_func_array($this->$closure, $args);
}
}
$func = new func(function($value){
echo $value;
});
$func->method = function(){
echo '<br>test<br>';
};
$func('someValue');
$func->method();
No.
Not everything is an object in PHP. In fact the only thing that is an object is, well, an object. More specifically, and generally, an instantiation of a class.
Your code converted to PHP
// function_object.php
<?php
class FunctionObject {
public method func() {
// do stuff
}
}
?>
In other code you would use it like this:
<?php
// example.php in same folder as function_object.php
include 'function_object.php';
$FuncObj = new FunctionObject;
$FuncObj->func();
Also: read more about PHP & OOP
No, because an object is a different PHP language construct than a function. Functions do not have properties, but are instead simply execution instructions.
But, if func were instead a pre-defined class, then yes... with a bit of witchcraft, ignoring public outcry, foregoing readability and PHP coding standards, and by using closures with the __call() magic method...
class func
{
function __call($func, $args)
{
return call_user_func_array($this->$func, $args);
}
}
$obj = new func;
$obj->test = function($param1, $param2)
{
return $param1 + $param2;
};
echo $obj->test(1,1);
This won't work as you'd think without __call(), because by $obj->test(1,1), PHP thinks you're trying to call a non-existent method of func when out of object scope. But inside, being that the new "test" property is of a type: closure, the call_user_func_array() just sees the "test" property as just another function, so you can hide this bit of trickery from outside scope.
You would need your function func() to return an object, then you'd be able to do something like: func()->test();
But please note that your way of handling objects is not right in PHP and I suggest that you go read the OO documentations here.
In difference to javacript, in PHP not everything is an object. Therefore you need to differ between function and class.
If you want to create an object, you need to define the class first.
class myClass {
}
You can then add as many functions to the class as you need. But you need to define them first:
class myClass {
function test() {
echo "test!\n";
}
}
When everything is ready, you can bring it to life then:
$class = new myClass;
$class->test();
Checkout the manual for more.
You can't do what you're trying to do, but you can define functions inside of other functions.
This example outputs text:
function a() {
function b() { echo 'Hi'; }
}
a();
b();
Output: HiHi
This example outputs an error:
function a() {
function b() { echo 'Hi'; }
}
b();
Output: ERROR
In PHP, how do you use an external $var for use within a function in a class? For example, say $some_external_var sets to true and you have something like
class myclass {
bla ....
bla ....
function myfunction() {
if (isset($some_external_var)) do something ...
}
}
$some_external_var =true;
$obj = new myclass();
$obj->myfunction();
Thanks
You'll need to use the global keyword inside your function, to make your external variable visible to that function.
For instance :
$my_var_2 = 'glop';
function test_2()
{
global $my_var_2;
var_dump($my_var_2); // string 'glop' (length=4)
}
test_2();
You could also use the $GLOBALS array, which is always visible, even inside functions.
But it is generally not considered a good practice to use global variables: your classes should not depend on some kind of external stuff that might or might not be there !
A better way would be to pass the variables you need as parameters, either to the methods themselves, or to the constructor of the class...
Global $some_external_var;
function myfunction() {
Global $some_external_var;
if (!empty($some_external_var)) do something ...
}
}
But because Global automatically sets it, check if it isn't empty.
that's bad software design. In order for a class to function, it needs to be provided with data. So, pass that external var into your class, otherwise you're creating unnecessary dependencies.
Why don't you just pass this variable during __construct() and make what the object does during construction conditional on the truth value of that variable?
Use Setters and Getters or maybe a centralized config like:
function config()
{
static $data;
if(!isset($data))
{
$data = new stdClass();
}
return $data;
}
class myClass
{
public function myFunction()
{
echo "config()->myConfigVar: " . config()->myConfigVar;
}
}
and the use it:
config()->myConfigVar = "Hello world";
$myClass = new myClass();
$myClass->myFunction();
http://www.evanbot.com/article/universally-accessible-data-php/24