I want to access private methods and variables from outside the classes in very rare specific cases.
I've seen that this is not be possible although introspection is used.
The specific case is the next one:
I would like to have something like this:
class Console
{
final public static function run() {
while (TRUE != FALSE) {
echo "\n> ";
$command = trim(fgets(STDIN));
switch ($command) {
case 'exit':
case 'q':
case 'quit':
echo "OK+\n";
return;
default:
ob_start();
eval($command);
$out = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
print("Command: $command");
print("Output:\n$out");
break;
}
}
}
}
This method should be able to be injected in the code like this:
Class Demo
{
private $a;
final public function myMethod()
{
// some code
Console::run();
// some other code
}
final public function myPublicMethod()
{
return "I can run through eval()";
}
private function myPrivateMethod()
{
return "I cannot run through eval()";
}
}
(this is just one simplification. the real one goes through a socket, and implement a bunch of more things...)
So...
If you instantiate the class Demo and you call $demo->myMethod(), you'll get a console: that console can access the first method writing a command like:
> $this->myPublicMethod();
But you cannot run successfully the second one:
> $this->myPrivateMethod();
Do any of you have any idea, or if there is any library for PHP that allows you to do this?
Thanks a lot!
Just make the method public. But if you want to get tricky you can try this (PHP 5.3):
class LockedGate
{
private function open()
{
return 'how did you get in here?!!';
}
}
$object = new LockedGate();
$reflector = new ReflectionObject($object);
$method = $reflector->getMethod('open');
$method->setAccessible(true);
echo $method->invoke($object);
EDIT:
Updated to include examples of private function calls with parameters.
As of PHP 5.4, you can use the predefined Closure class to bind a method/property of a class to a delta functions that has access even to private members.
The Closure class
For example we have a class with a private variable and we want to access it outside the class:
class Foo {
private $bar = "Foo::Bar";
private function add_ab($a, $b) {
return $a + $b;
}
}
PHP 5.4+
$foo = new Foo;
// Single variable example
$getFooBarCallback = function() {
return $this->bar;
};
$getFooBar = $getFooBarCallback->bindTo($foo, 'Foo');
echo $getFooBar(); // Prints Foo::Bar
// Function call with parameters example
$getFooAddABCallback = function() {
// As of PHP 5.6 we can use $this->fn(...func_get_args()) instead of call_user_func_array
return call_user_func_array(array($this, 'add_ab'), func_get_args());
};
$getFooAddAB = $getFooAddABCallback->bindTo($foo, 'Foo');
echo $getFooAddAB(33, 6); // Prints 39
As of PHP 7, you can use the new Closure::call method, to bind any method/property of an obect to a callback function, even for private members:
PHP 7+
$foo = new Foo;
// Single variable example
$getFooBar = function() {
return $this->bar;
};
echo $getFooBar->call($foo); // Prints Foo::Bar
// Function call with parameters example
$getFooAddAB = function() {
return $this->add_ab(...func_get_args());
};
echo $getFooAddAB->call($foo, 33, 6); // Prints 39
The first question you should ask is, if you need to access it from outside the class, why did you declare it private? If it's not your code, the originator probably had a good reason to declare it private, and accessing it directly is a very bad (and largely unmaintainable) practice.
EDIT: As Adam V. points out in the comments, you need to make the private method accessible before invoking it. Code sample updated to include this. I haven't tested it, though - just adding here to keep the answer updated.
That having been said, you can use Reflection to accomplish this. Instantiate ReflectionClass, call getMethod for the method you want to invoke, and then call invoke on the returned ReflectionMethod.
A code sample (though I haven't tested it, so there may be errors) might look like
$demo = new Demo();
$reflection_class = new ReflectionClass("Demo");
$reflection_method = $reflection_class->getMethod("myPrivateMethod");
$reflection_method->setAccessible(true);
$result = $reflection_method->invoke($demo, NULL);
Here's a variation of the other answers that can be used to make such calls one line:
public function callPrivateMethod($object, $methodName)
{
$reflectionClass = new \ReflectionClass($object);
$reflectionMethod = $reflectionClass->getMethod($methodName);
$reflectionMethod->setAccessible(true);
$params = array_slice(func_get_args(), 2); //get all the parameters after $methodName
return $reflectionMethod->invokeArgs($object, $params);
}
I have these problems too sometimes, however I get around it through my coding standards. Private or protected functions are denoted with a prefix underscore ie
private function _myPrivateMethod()
Then i simply make the function public.
public function _myPrivateMethod()
So although the function is public the naming convention gives the notification that whilst public is is private and shouldn't really be used.
If you are able to added a method in the class where the method is defined, you can add method which uses the call_user_method() internally. This works also with PHP 5.2.x
<?php
class SomeClass {
public function callprivate($methodName) {
call_user_method(array($this, $methodName));
}
private function somePrivateMethod() {
echo 'test';
}
}
$object = new SomeClass();
$object->callprivate('somePrivateMethod');
Answer is put public to the method. Whatever trick you are going to do it wouldn't be understandable to fellow developers. For example they do not know that at some other code this function has been accessed as public by looking at the Demo class.
One more thing. that console can access the first method writing a command like:. How can this even be possible? Console can not access demo class functions by using $this.
I guess the reflectionClass is the only alternative if you really want to execute some private methods. Anyhow, if you just need read access to privat or protected properties, you could use this code:
<?php
class Demo
{
private $foo = "bar";
}
$demo = new Demo();
// Will return an object with public, private and protected properties in public scope.
$properties = json_decode(preg_replace('/\\\\u([0-9a-f]{4})|'.get_class($demo).'/i', '', json_encode((array) $demo)));
?>
<?php
$request="email";
$data=[1,2,3,4,5];
$name=new Update($request,$data);
class Update{
private $request;
private $data;
function __construct($request,$data){
$this->request=$request;
$this->data=$data;
if($this->request=='email'){
$this->update_email();
}
else{
echo "Can't do anything";
}
}
private function update_email(){
echo $this->request;
echo '\n';
foreach($this->data as $x){
echo $x."\n";
}
}
}
?>
Related
PHP allows for variables to hold functions like so:
$f = function($a,$b) {
print "$a $b";
};
$f("Hello","World!"); //prints 'Hello World!'
This works just fine for me. I'm trying to pass a function into a class and set an instance variable to hold that function but with little luck:
class Clusterer {
private $distanceFunc;
public function __construct($f) {
$this->distanceFunc = $f;
print $f(1,7); //works
print $this->distanceFunc(1,7); //exceptions and errors abound
}
}
$func = function($a,$b) {
return abs($a-$b);
}
$c = new Clusterer($func);
Am I doing something wrong here? The error is that the function doesn't exist so my guess currently is that it looks for a class function with that name (which there isn't one) and then gives up rather than looking for variables as well... how can I make it view the $this->distanceFunc as a variable?
EDIT:
So after the advice from the answers below, I found a solution which was the make a function to wrap the invocation. For example my class is now:
class Clusterer {
private $distanceFunc;
public function __construct($f) {
$this->distanceFunc = $f;
print $f(1,7); //works
print $this->distanceFunc(1,7); //exceptions and errors abound
}
private function distanceFunc($a,$b) {
$holder = $this->distanceFunc;
return $holder($a,$b);
}
}
$func = function($a,$b) {
return abs($a-$b);
}
$c = new Clusterer($func);
and this works great. Php looks for functions first and can only tell if it is a variable by context I guess is the moral of this story.
Your code doesn't work because PHP interprets $this->distanceFunc(1,7) as a class method, but you can do the following:
class Clusterer {
private $distanceFunc;
public function __construct($f) {
$this->distanceFunc = $f;
print $f(1,7); //works
print call_user_func_array($this->distanceFunc, array(1, 7));
// print $this->distanceFunc(1,7); //exceptions and errors abound
}
}
$func = function($a,$b) {
return abs($a-$b);
};
$c = new Clusterer($func);
http://sandbox.onlinephpfunctions.com/code/cdc1bd6bd50f62d5c88631387ac9543368069310
In PHP, methods and properties of an object occupy separate namespaces. This is different from JavaScript, for example, where foo.bar = function() {} is a perfectly valid way of defining a method.
Consequently, $this->distanceFunc(1,7); looks for a method named distanceFunc on the current class, and the classes it inherits from, but never looks for the property which you happen to have given the same name.
One solution is to force PHP to look up a property, then execute it, e.g. $foo = $this->distanceFunc; $foo(1,7) or call_user_func($this->distanceFunc, 1, 7)
Another would be to define the magic method __call on your class, which gets run whenever a non-existent method is referenced. Something like this ought to work (I don't have an easy way to testright now):
function __call($func, $args) {
if ( property_exists($this, $func) && is_callable($this->$func) ) {
return call_user_func_array($this->$func, $args);
}
}
Note that this still isn't the same as a real method, for instance in terms of access to private properties.
It looks like you're going for a strategy pattern here. IE you want to be able to inject different methods for calculating distance? If so there is a more "sane" way to do it.
You can define an interface to the classes you will use to store the strategy method ensuring that the class will always have the method calculate() for example which would be your distance calculation function. Then in the constructor of your Clusterer class, type check against the interface in the parameter and call calculate() on the object passed in.
Looks like this:
interface Calculateable
{
public function calculate();
}
class MyDistanceCalculator implements Calculateable
{
public function calculate()
{
// Your function here
}
}
class Clusterer
{
protected $calc;
public function __construct(Calculateable $calc)
{
$this->calc = $calc;
$this->calc->calculate();
}
}
$myClusterer = new Clusterer(new MyDistanceCalculator());
Because you defined an interface, any object you pass in will have the calculate() function
In HHVM, you can do this:
<?php
class Foo
{
public function __construct()
{
$this->bar = function() { echo "Here\n"; };
($this->bar)();
}
}
new Foo();
But it's not yet supported in PHP. But, it will be in PHP 7 (there will be no release named PHP 6).
PHP doesn't have first class functions. In JavaScript if you returned a function you could do this: myFunctionThatReturnsAFunction()(1,2), but not in PHP.
<?php
class Clusterer {
private $distanceFunc;
public function __construct(Closure $f) {
$this->distanceFunc = $f;
}
public function getDistFunc()
{
return $this->distanceFunc;
}
}
$func = function($a,$b) {
return abs($a-$b);
};
$c = new Clusterer($func);
$a = $c->getDistFunc();
echo $a(1,2);
Take a look at call_user_func
class Clusterer {
private $distanceFunc;
public function __construct($f) {
$this->distanceFunc = $f;
print $f(1,7); //works
print call_user_func($this->distanceFunc, 1, 7); //works too ;)
}
}
$func = function($a,$b) {
return abs($a-$b);
};
$c = new Clusterer($func);
Don't ask me what is the difference, but it works the way you want (One of the reasons i hate this language)
I want to get static method from class and copy it to variable.
This is non-working example illustrating my question:
class foo
{
public static function bar($argument){ return 2*$argument; }
}
$class = new ReflectionClass('foo');
// here is no ReflectionMethod::getClosure() method in reality
$lambda = $class->getMethod('bar')->getClosure();
echo $lambda(3);
So my question: is this possible by any normal way? I find only one way for now. I can parse source file, get method source from it and convert it using create_function() but it's too perverse.
Just wrap it with closure.
$lamda = function($argument){return foo::bar($argument);};
Or you can try to use something like this
function staticMethodToClosure($class, $method) {
return function($argument)use($class, $method){return $class::$method($argument);};
}
An array in the format array($className, $methodName) is invokable as a static method call so this may work for you.
class foo
{
public static function bar($argument){ return 2*$argument; }
public static function getStaticFunction($arg){
return array("foo", $arg);
}
}
$a = foo::getStaticFunction("bar");
echo $a(5); // echos 10
I need to have a variable that only one function can write (let's call that function a) and that only one other function can read (let's call that function b). Is that possible?
You could use a static variable:
function foo($val=null) {
static $var = null;
if (!is_null($var)) $var = $val;
return $val;
}
Here $var is only visible inside the function foo and is maintained throughout multiple calls:
foo(123);
echo foo(); // 123
foo(456);
echo foo(); // 456
Or use a class with a private member and access/modify it with public methods:
class A {
private $var;
public function setVar($val) {
$this->var = $val;
}
public function getVar() {
return $this->var;
}
}
With this the private member var is only visible to a particular instance of this class:
$obj1 = new A();
$obj1->setVar(123);
$obj2 = new A();
$obj2->setVar(456);
echo $obj1->getVar(); // 123
echo $obj2->getVar(); // 456
If you make the member static, then there is just one for the class instead of for each instance:
class A {
private static $var;
public function setVar($val) {
self::$var = $val;
}
public function getVar() {
return self::$var;
}
}
$obj1 = new A();
$obj1->setVar(123);
$obj2 = new A();
$obj2->setVar(456);
echo $obj1->getVar(); // 456
echo $obj2->getVar(); // 456
You can use a static abstract class.
abstract class Settings
{
private static var $_settings = array();
public static function get($key,$default = false)
{
return isset(self::$_settings[$key]) ? self::$_settings[$key] : $default;
}
public static function set($key,$value)
{
self::$_settings[$key] = $value;
}
}
Example Usage:
Settings::set('SiteName',`SomeResult`);
echo Settings::get('SiteName');
Since 5.3.0, you can use anonymous functions as closures. The advantage here, is that you can hold on to b... which is returned by a... and fire it off when you're ready:
<?php
function a()
{
// Only a() can write to $myVar
$myVar = 42;
$b = function() use ($myVar)
{
// $b can read $myVar
// no one else can
return $myVar;
};
return $b;
}
// get $b
$test = a();
// use $b
echo $test();
?>
Another solution before 5.3.0, but here a has to fire b which may not be that practical:
You can simply create an internal variable and pass it as an argument. You can do this inside a class, or just inside simple functions:
function a()
{
// ...
// Write the variable that
// only this function can write to
$thisVar = 1;
b($thisVar);
//...
}
function b($myVar)
{
// ...
// Do stuff w $myVar, a copy of $thisVar
// Changing $myVar has no effect on $thisVar
//
}
Do you mean friend functions? Because I'd love to be able to do that. So far I haven't found an easy way though (although you could try using Reflection, but that seems like way to much effort).
For me, it usually hasn't been an issue of maintaining data integrity / encapsulation, but of keeping the list of public methods (which is kinda like a class's API) free of clutter. A perfect framework should be easy to use, have obvious function names etc etc etc. Methods intended for use by a single other method really mess things up. The "solution" I've taken to is prefixing those function names by one or two underscores and writing "intended for internal use only" or something to that extent in the comments.
Ive looked and tried but I can't find an answer.
In PHP, is it possible to call a class' member function (when that class requires a constructor to receive parameters) without instantiating it as an object?
A code example (which gives errors):
<?php
class Test {
private $end="";
function __construct($value) {
$this->end=$value;
}
public function alert($value) {
echo $value." ".$this->end;
}
}
//this works:
$example=new Test("world");
$example->alert("hello");
//this does not work:
echo Test("world")::alert("hello");
?>
Unfortunately PHP doesn't have support to do this, but you are a creative and look guy :D
You can use an "factory", sample:
<?php
class Foo
{
private $__aaa = null;
public function __construct($aaa)
{
$this->__aaa = $aaa;
}
public static function factory($aaa)
{
return new Foo($aaa);
}
public function doX()
{
return $this->__aaa * 2;
}
}
Foo::factory(10)->doX(); // outputs 20
Just do this (in PHP >= 5.4):
$t = (new Test("Hello"))->foo("world");
I, too, was looking for a one-liner to accomplish this as part of a single expression for converting dates from one format to another. I like doing this in a single line of code because it is a single logical operation. So, this is a little cryptic, but it lets you instantiate and use a date object within a single line:
$newDateString = ($d = new DateTime('2011-08-30') ? $d->format('F d, Y') : '');
Another way to one-line the conversion of date strings from one format to another is to use a helper function to manage the OO parts of the code:
function convertDate($oldDateString,$newDateFormatString) {
$d = new DateTime($oldDateString);
return $d->format($newDateFormatString);
}
$myNewDate = convertDate($myOldDate,'F d, Y');
I think the object oriented approach is cool and necessary, but it can sometimes be tedious, requiring too many steps to accomplish simple operations.
You can't call an instance-level method without an instance. Your syntax:
echo Test("world")::alert("hello");
doesn't make a lot of sense. Either you're creating an inline instance and discarding it immediately or the alert() method has no implicit this instance.
Assuming:
class Test {
public function __construct($message) {
$this->message = $message;
}
public function foo($message) {
echo "$this->message $message";
}
}
you can do:
$t = new Test("Hello");
$t->foo("world");
but PHP syntax doesn't allow:
new Test("Hello")->foo("world");
which would otherwise be the equivalent. There are a few examples of this in PHP (eg using array indexing on a function return). That's just the way it is.
For this you can do a
https://www.php.net/manual/en/reflectionclass.newinstancewithoutconstructor.php
reflect your class and trigger the new instance without constructor.
Here a sample code:
<?php
class Test {
private $end="";
function __construct($value) {
$this->end=$value;
}
public function alert($value) {
echo $value." ".$this->end;
}
public function end($value) {
$this->end = $value;
return $this; // return Test object so that you can chain to other function method.
}
}
// Solution #1:
// reflect your class.
$reflector = new \ReflectionClass('Test');
// Then create a new instance without Constructor.
// This will ignore the constructor BUT it will create a new instance of class Test.
$say = $reflector->newInstanceWithoutConstructor();
// use end method that will return the Test object, then you can chain the alert()
$say->end('World!')->alert("Hello"); // output: Hello World!
?>
// this does not work:
echo Test("world")::alert("hello");
// works, as you are calling not to an object of the class, but to its namespace
echo Test::alert("hello");
PHP
mysql database
I have created a follow on question to this one here that is specifically about pagination
I need to call a method from one class in another, and be able to change the method that is called. Like so
class db{
function a(){ echo 'I run a query';}
function b(){ echo 'im the other query';}
}
class YourClass {
var $fcn;
$db = new db()
function invoke(){
call_user_func($this->fcn);
}
}
$instance = new YourClass;
$instance->fcn = 'db->a';
$instance->invoke();
I want to use a method 'a' from the db class in the 'yourClass' method 'invoke'
Thanks
Ok this is what i have put together from the answers provided and it works.
class A {
function a(){
$x = 'Method a is used';
return $x;
}
function b(){
$x = 'Method b is used';
return $x;
}
}
class B {
function invoke($obj, $method){
echo call_user_func( array( $obj, $method) );
}
}
$instance = new B();
$instance->invoke(new A(),"a");
Which writes, 'Method a is used' to the screen
But i really want to be able to pass arguments to method "a" so i tried the code below.
class A {
function a($var1,$var2,$var3){
$x = 'the three passed values are ' . $var1 . ' and ' . $var2 . ' and ' . $var3;
return $x;
}
function b(){
$x = 'im method b';
return $x;
}
}
class B {
function invoke($obj,$arguments){
echo call_user_func_array($obj,$arguments);
}
}
$arguments = array('apple','banana','pineapple');
$use_function = array(new A(),"a");
$instance = new B();
$instance->invoke($use_function,$arguments);
It almost works but i get these errors above the correct answer
Missing argument 1 for A::a(),.....for argument 2 and 3 as well but then the answer prints to the screen
"the three passed values are apple and banana and pineapple"
I'm probably making a rookie mistake I've been coding all day. If someone could fix the script above and submit the working code, I would be eternally grateful. I have to put this issue to bed so i can go to bed.
Thanks
As of PHP5.3 you could use closures or functors to pass methods around. Prior to that, you could write an anonymous function with create_function(), but that is rather awkward.
Basically, what you are trying to do could be done with the Strategy Pattern.
removed example code, as it wasn't helpful anymore after the OP changed the question (see wiki)
Apart from that, you might want to look into Fowlers's Data Source Architectural Patterns. The Zend Framework (and pretty much all other PHP frameworks) offers database access classes you could use for these patterns and there is also a paginator class, so why not check them out to learn how they did it.
removed EDIT 1 as it wasn't helpful anymore after the OP changed the question (see wiki)
EDIT 2
Ok, let's take a step by step approach to this (not using a Strategy Pattern though)
What you are asking for in the question can easily be solved with this code:
class Foo
{
public function bar()
{
echo 'bar method in Foo';
}
}
class MyInvoker
{
protected $myObject;
public function __construct()
{
$this->myObject = new Foo();
}
public function __call($method, $args)
{
$invocation = array($this->myObject, $method);
return call_user_func_array($invocation, $args);
}
}
With this code you'd just call the appropriate methods. No setting of methods names. No clumsy extra invoke method. No reinventing of how methods are called. You dont need it, because PHP has the __call function that you just taught to send all methods not existing in MyInvoker to $myObject, e.g. Foo.:
$invoker = new MyInvoker;
$invoker->bar(); // outputs 'bar method in Foo called'
You might just as well have extended MyInvoker to be a subclass of Foo, e.g.
class MyInvoker extends Foo {}
and then you could do the same. This not what you need though and it illustrates how pointless it is, to do such a thing. MyInvoker now does nothing by itself. It is an empty class and effectively the same as Foo. Even with the previous approach using the __call method it is not doing anything. This is why I have asked you to be more specific about the desired outcome, which is a Paginator.
First try:
class Paginator()
{
// A class holding all possible queries of our application
protected $queries;
// A class providing access to the database, like PDO_MySql
protected $dbConn;
public function __construct()
{
$this->db = new MyPdo();
$this->queries = new DbQueries();
}
public function __call($method, $args)
{
$invocation = array($this->queries, $method);
$query = call_user_func_array($invocation, $args);
return $this->dbConn->query($query);
}
}
With that code, our Paginator creates everything it needs inside itself, tightly coupling the db connection class and all queries and it allows you to call upon these, like so
$paginator = new Paginator;
// assuming we have something like getImageCount() in DbQueries
echo $paginator->getImageCount();
What is happening then is, Paginator will recognize it doesnt know getImageCount() and will invoke the __call method. The __call method will try to invoke the getImageCount() method on the DbQueries. Since it exists, it will return the query, which in turn is passed to the db connection to execute it. Great you'd say, but it's not. In fact, this is horrible. Your paginator's responsibility is to count items in a table and fetch items from this table in a certain range and amount. But right now, it is not doing anything like this. It is completely oblivious to whats going on, so lets try a new class:
class Paginator
{
protected $dbConn;
protected $itemCount;
public function __construct($dbConn)
{
$this->dbConn = $dbConn;
}
public function countItems($query)
{
$this->itemCount = $this->dbConn->query('select count(*) from (?)', $query);
return $this->itemCount;
}
public function fetchItems($query, $offset = 0, $limit = 20)
{
$sql = sprintf('select * from (?) LIMIT %d, %d', $offset, $limit);
return $this->dbConn->query($sql, $query);
}
}
Much better. Now our Paginator is an aggregate instead of a composite, meaning it does not instantiate objects inside itself, but requires them to be passed to it in the constructor. This is called dependency injection (and also provides a loose coupling, when dbConn uses an interface) which will make your app much more maintainable, as it is easy to exchange components now. This will also come in handy when Unit Testing your code.
In addition, your Paginator now concentrates on what it is supposed to do: counting and fetching items of an arbitrary query. No need to pass methods around. No need for obscure method invocation. You'd use it like this:
$paginator = new Paginator($dbConn);
$query = $dbQueries->findImagesUploadedLastWeek(); // returns SQL query string
$images = $paginator->countItems($query);
if($images > 0) {
$images = $paginator->fetchItems($query);
}
And that's it. Well, almost. You'd have to render the pagination of course. But this should be rather trivial, if you extend what you already have above. The $imageCount property is a hint at where to go next.
Anyway, hope that I could shed some light.
P.S. The $this->dbConn->query($sql, $query) calls are of course dummy code. Dont expect to be able to copy and paste it and get it working. In addition, you should make sure the queries added to the Paginator SQL is safe to use. You wouldnt want someone to insert a query that deletes all your db rows. Never trust user input.
P.P.S. $query should be an SQL query string. Check the PHP manual for PDO::prepare. In general, it yields better performance and security to prepare a statement before executing it. The page in the manual will give you the clues about the ? in the query calls. If you dont want to use PDO, just use sprintf() or str_replace() to replace ? with $query, e.g. $this->dbConn->query(sprintf('SELECT count(*) from (%s)', $query) but keep in mind that this has none of the benefits of a prepared statement and potentially opens the door for SQL Injection vulnerabilities.
P.P.P.S Yes, Dependency Injection is generally a preferred strategy. This is an advanved topic though and might be too much to fully grasp right now, but it's well worth looking into it. For now, it should be enough if you try to favor favor aggregation over composition. Your classes should only do what they are responsible for and get any dependencies through the constructor.
Here are two ways of doing it:
class YourClass {
var $fcn;
function invoke($arguments){
//one way:
$this->{$this->fcn}($arguments);
//another way:
call_user_func_array(array($this, $this->fcn), $arguments);
}
function a(){
echo 'I am a()';
}
}
$instance = new YourClass;
$instance->fcn = 'a';
$instance->invoke();
This'll print out "I am a()" from inside the class.
you are almost there
class db {
function a(){ echo 'I run a query';}
function b(){ echo 'im the other query';}
}
class YourClass {
var $fcn;
function __construct() {
$this->db = new db();
}
function invoke() {
call_user_func(array(
$this->{$this->fcn[0]},
$this->fcn[1]
));
}
}
$instance = new YourClass;
$instance->fcn = array('db', 'a');
$instance->invoke();
$instance->fcn = array('db', 'b');
$instance->invoke();
the syntax is quite fancy, but it works
// edit: from your comment it looks like the simplest option is to pass method name as string, like this
class Paginator {
function __consturct($db, $counter_func) ...
function get_count() {
$args = func_get_args();
return call_user_func_array(
array($this->db, $this->counter_func),
$args);
}
}
new Paginator($db, 'get_num_products');
I am guessing that you are using php here. Php supports variable functions which might solve you problem but as far as I am aware does not support delegates/function pointers.
What database are you using? I would be against putting queries within the code and using stored procedures as an alternative, if this is supported in the database you are using. This may solve the underlying problem you have.
Are you asking if PHP has functional references? It doesn't. But it does let you call functions by putting their name in a string, or an array of a class name and method name.
See call_user_func() for a description, and variable functions.
class DB {
function a(){ echo 'I run a query';}
function b(){ echo 'im the other query';}
}
class B {
protected $db;
private $method;
function __constructor($db) { $this->db; }
function invoke($m){
$this->method = $m;
// Non static call
call_user_func( array( $this->db, $this->method ) );
}
}
$db = new DB();
$b = new B($db);
$b->invoke('a');
I have made little modifications to my initial answer. You could also check out this post, it may help:
Database and OOP Practices in PHP
The Observer Design Pattern may be useful for this sort of thing, or it might be a misuse of the pattern; I don't know yet. Anyway, for your consideration:
class DbObserver implements SplObserver
{
public function update(SplSubject $subject) // Required
{
$method = $subject->getObserverMethod();
$args = $subject->getObserverArgs();
$this->$method($args);
}
private function a($args)
{
echo 'I run query ' . $args[0] . '<br />';
}
private function b($args)
{
echo 'I run query ' . $args[0] . ' because ' . $args[1] . '<br />';
}
private function c()
{
echo 'I have no argument' . '<br />';
}
}
class ObserverObserver implements SplObserver
{
public function update(SplSubject $subject) // Required
{
if (count($subject->getAttached()) > 1) {
echo 'I saw that<br />';
} else {
echo 'Nothing happened<br />';
}
}
}
class DbSubject implements SplSubject
{
private $observerMethod;
private $observerArgs = array();
private $attached = array();
public function notify() // Required
{
foreach ($this->attached as $each) {
$each->update($this);
}
}
public function attach(SplObserver $observer) // Required
{
$this->attached[] = $observer;
}
public function detach(SplObserver $observer) // Required
{
$key = array_keys($this->attached, $observer);
unset($this->attached[$key[0]]);
}
public function setObserverMethod($method, $args = array())
{
$this->observerMethod = $method;
$this->observerArgs = $args;
return $this;
}
public function getObserverMethod()
{
return $this->observerMethod;
}
public function getObserverArgs()
{
return $this->observerArgs;
}
public function getAttached()
{
return $this->attached;
}
}
$db_subj = new DbSubject;
$db_obs = new DbObserver;
$db_subj->attach($db_obs);
$args = array('A');
$db_subj->setObserverMethod('a', $args)->notify();
$args = array('B', 'I can');
$db_subj->setObserverMethod('b', $args)->notify();
$obsvr = new ObserverObserver;
$db_subj->attach($obsvr);
$db_subj->setObserverMethod('c')->notify();
$db_subj->detach($db_obs);
$db_subj->notify();
/**
I run query A
I run query B because I can
I have no argument
I saw that
Nothing happened
**/
You need to make this change:
$arguments = array('apple','banana','pineapple');
$a = new A();
$use_function = array(&$a,"a"); // Make this changes to your code
$instance = new B();
$instance->invoke($use_function,$arguments);
class A {
function a(){ echo 'I run a query';}
function b(){ echo 'im the other query';}
}
class B {
function Test() {
invoke(new $A(), "a");
}
function invoke($obj, $method){
// Non static call
call_user_func( array( $obj, $method ) );
// Static call
//call_user_func( array( 'ClassName', 'method' ) );
}
}
I hope this helps.