Passing an Array as Arguments, not an Array, in PHP - php

I seem to remember that in PHP there is a way to pass an array as a list of arguments for a function, dereferencing the array into the standard func($arg1, $arg2) manner. But now I'm lost on how to do it. I recall the manner of passing by reference, how to "glob" incoming parameters ... but not how to de-list the array into a list of arguments.
It may be as simple as func(&$myArgs), but I'm pretty sure that isn't it. But, sadly, the php.net manual hasn't divulged anything so far. Not that I've had to use this particular feature for the last year or so.

http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.call-user-func-array.php
call_user_func_array('func',$myArgs);

As has been mentioned, as of PHP 5.6+ you can (should!) use the ... token (aka "splat operator", part of the variadic functions functionality) to easily call a function with an array of arguments:
<?php
function variadic($arg1, $arg2)
{
// Do stuff
echo $arg1.' '.$arg2;
}
$array = ['Hello', 'World'];
// 'Splat' the $array in the function call
variadic(...$array);
// 'Hello World'
Note: array items are mapped to arguments by their position in the array, not their keys.
As per CarlosCarucce's comment, this form of argument unpacking is the fastest method by far in all cases. In some comparisons, it's over 5x faster than call_user_func_array.
Aside
Because I think this is really useful (though not directly related to the question): you can type-hint the splat operator parameter in your function definition to make sure all of the passed values match a specific type.
(Just remember that doing this it MUST be the last parameter you define and that it bundles all parameters passed to the function into the array.)
This is great for making sure an array contains items of a specific type:
<?php
// Define the function...
function variadic($var, SomeClass ...$items)
{
// $items will be an array of objects of type `SomeClass`
}
// Then you can call...
variadic('Hello', new SomeClass, new SomeClass);
// or even splat both ways
$items = [
new SomeClass,
new SomeClass,
];
variadic('Hello', ...$items);

Also note that if you want to apply an instance method to an array, you need to pass the function as:
call_user_func_array(array($instance, "MethodName"), $myArgs);

For sake of completeness, as of PHP 5.1 this works, too:
<?php
function title($title, $name) {
return sprintf("%s. %s\r\n", $title, $name);
}
$function = new ReflectionFunction('title');
$myArray = array('Dr', 'Phil');
echo $function->invokeArgs($myArray); // prints "Dr. Phil"
?>
See: http://php.net/reflectionfunction.invokeargs
For methods you use ReflectionMethod::invokeArgs instead and pass the object as first parameter.

Related

How to store a name of a function in an array and call it when needed? [duplicate]

I need to be able to call a function, but the function name is stored in a variable, is this possible? e.g:
function foo ()
{
//code here
}
function bar ()
{
//code here
}
$functionName = "foo";
// I need to call the function based on what is $functionName
$functionName() or call_user_func($functionName)
My favorite version is the inline version:
${"variableName"} = 12;
$className->{"propertyName"};
$className->{"methodName"}();
StaticClass::${"propertyName"};
StaticClass::{"methodName"}();
You can place variables or expressions inside the brackets too!
Solution: Use PHP7
Note: For a summarized version, see TL;DR at the end of the answer.
Old Methods
Update: One of the old methods explained here has been removed. Refer to other answers for explanation on other methods, it isn't covered here. By the way, if this answer doesn't help you, you should return upgrading your stuff. PHP 5.6 support has ended in January 2019 (now even PHP 7.2 and 7.3 are not being supported). See supported versions for more information.
As others mentioned, in PHP5 (and also in newer versions like PHP7) we could use variables as function names, use call_user_func() and call_user_func_array(), etc.
New Methods
As of PHP7, there are new ways introduced:
Note: Everything inside <something> brackets means one or more expressions to form something, e.g. <function_name> means expressions forming a function name.
Dynamic Function Call: Function Name On-the-fly
We can form a function name inside parentheses in just one go:
(<function_name>)(arguments);
For example:
function something(): string
{
return "something";
}
$bar = "some_thing";
(str_replace("_", "", $bar))(); // something
// Possible, too; but generally, not recommended, because makes your
// code more complicated
(str_replace("_", "", $bar))()();
Note: Although removing the parentheses around str_replace() is not an error, putting parentheses makes code more readable. However, you cannot do that sometimes, e.g. while using . operator. To be consistent, I recommend you to put the parentheses always.
Dynamic Function Call: Callable Property
A useful example would be in the context of objects: If you have stored a callable in a property, you have to call it this way:
($object->{<property_name>})();
As a simple example:
// Suppose we're in a class method context
($this->eventHandler)();
Obviously, calling it as $this->eventHandler() is plain wrong: By that you mean calling a method named eventHandler.
Dynamic Method Call: Method Name On-the-fly
Just like dynamic function calls, we can do the same way with method calls, surrounded by curly braces instead of parentheses (for extra forms, navigate to TL;DR section):
$object->{<method_name>}(arguments);
$object::{<method_name>}(arguments);
See it in an example:
class Foo
{
public function another(): string
{
return "something";
}
}
$bar = "another thing";
(new Something())->{explode(" ", $bar)[0]}(); // something
Dynamic Method Call: The Array Syntax
A more elegant way added in PHP7 is the following:
[<object>, <method_name>](arguments);
[<class_name>, <method_name>](arguments); // Static calls only
As an example:
class Foo
{
public function nonStaticCall()
{
echo "Non-static call";
}
public static function staticCall()
{
echo "Static call";
}
}
$x = new X();
[$x, "non" . "StaticCall"](); // Non-static call
[$x, "static" . "Call"](); // Static call
Note: The benefit of using this method over the previous one is that, you don't care about the call type (i.e. whether it's static or not).
Note: If you care about performance (and micro-optimizations), don't use this method. As I tested, this method is really slower than other methods (more than 10 times).
Extra Example: Using Anonymous Classes
Making things a bit complicated, you could use a combination of anonymous classes and the features above:
$bar = "SomeThing";
echo (new class {
public function something()
{
return 512;
}
})->{strtolower($bar)}(); // 512
TL;DR (Conclusion)
Generally, in PHP7, using the following forms are all possible:
// Everything inside `<something>` brackets means one or more expressions
// to form something
// Dynamic function call via function name
(<function_name>)(arguments);
// Dynamic function call on a callable property
($object->{<property_name>})(arguments);
// Dynamic method call on an object
$object->{<method_name>}(arguments);
$object::{<method_name>}(arguments);
// Dynamic method call on a dynamically-generated object
(<object>)->{<method_name>}(arguments);
(<object>)::{<method_name>}(arguments);
// Dynamic method call, statically
ClassName::{<method_name>}(arguments);
(<class_name>)::{<method_name>}(arguments);
// Dynamic method call, array-like (no different between static
// and non-static calls
[<object>, <method_name>](arguments);
// Dynamic method call, array-like, statically
[<class_name>, <method_name>](arguments);
Special thanks to this PHP talk.
Yes, it is possible:
function foo($msg) {
echo $msg."<br />";
}
$var1 = "foo";
$var1("testing 1,2,3");
Source: http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/php/2001/05/17/php_foundations.html?page=2
As already mentioned, there are a few ways to achieve this with possibly the safest method being call_user_func() or if you must you can also go down the route of $function_name(). It is possible to pass arguments using both of these methods as so
$function_name = 'foobar';
$function_name(arg1, arg2);
call_user_func_array($function_name, array(arg1, arg2));
If the function you are calling belongs to an object you can still use either of these
$object->$function_name(arg1, arg2);
call_user_func_array(array($object, $function_name), array(arg1, arg2));
However if you are going to use the $function_name() method it may be a good idea to test for the existence of the function if the name is in any way dynamic
if(method_exists($object, $function_name))
{
$object->$function_name(arg1, arg2);
}
A few years late, but this is the best manner now imho:
$x = (new ReflectionFunction("foo"))->getClosure();
$x();
In case someone else is brought here by google because they were trying to use a variable for a method within a class, the below is a code sample which will actually work. None of the above worked for my situation. The key difference is the & in the declaration of $c = & new... and &$c being passed in call_user_func.
My specific case is when implementing someone's code having to do with colors and two member methods lighten() and darken() from the csscolor.php class. For whatever reason, I wanted to have the same code be able to call lighten or darken rather than select it out with logic. This may be the result of my stubbornness to not just use if-else or to change the code calling this method.
$lightdark="lighten"; // or optionally can be darken
$color="fcc"; // a hex color
$percent=0.15;
include_once("csscolor.php");
$c = & new CSS_Color($color);
$rtn=call_user_func( array(&$c,$lightdark),$color,$percent);
Note that trying anything with $c->{...} didn't work. Upon perusing the reader-contributed content at the bottom of php.net's page on call_user_func, I was able to piece together the above. Also, note that $params as an array didn't work for me:
// This doesn't work:
$params=Array($color,$percent);
$rtn=call_user_func( array(&$c,$lightdark),$params);
This above attempt would give a warning about the method expecting a 2nd argument (percent).
For the sake of completeness, you can also use eval():
$functionName = "foo()";
eval($functionName);
However, call_user_func() is the proper way.
Dynamic function names and namespaces
Just to add a point about dynamic function names when using namespaces.
If you're using namespaces, the following won't work except if your function is in the global namespace:
namespace greetings;
function hello()
{
// do something
}
$myvar = "hello";
$myvar(); // interpreted as "\hello();"
What to do?
You have to use call_user_func() instead:
// if hello() is in the current namespace
call_user_func(__NAMESPACE__.'\\'.$myvar);
// if hello() is in another namespace
call_user_func('mynamespace\\'.$myvar);
Complementing the answer of #Chris K if you want to call an object's method, you can call it using a single variable with the help of a closure:
function get_method($object, $method){
return function() use($object, $method){
$args = func_get_args();
return call_user_func_array(array($object, $method), $args);
};
}
class test{
function echo_this($text){
echo $text;
}
}
$test = new test();
$echo = get_method($test, 'echo_this');
$echo('Hello'); //Output is "Hello"
I posted another example here
Use the call_user_func function.
What I learnt from this question and the answers. Thanks all!
Let say I have these variables and functions:
$functionName1 = "sayHello";
$functionName2 = "sayHelloTo";
$functionName3 = "saySomethingTo";
$friend = "John";
$datas = array(
"something"=>"how are you?",
"to"=>"Sarah"
);
function sayHello()
{
echo "Hello!";
}
function sayHelloTo($to)
{
echo "Dear $to, hello!";
}
function saySomethingTo($something, $to)
{
echo "Dear $to, $something";
}
To call function without arguments
// Calling sayHello()
call_user_func($functionName1);
Hello!
To call function with 1 argument
// Calling sayHelloTo("John")
call_user_func($functionName2, $friend);
Dear John, hello!
To call function with 1 or more arguments
This will be useful if you are dynamically calling your functions and each function have different number of arguments. This is my case that I have been looking for (and solved). call_user_func_array is the key
// You can add your arguments
// 1. statically by hard-code,
$arguments[0] = "how are you?"; // my $something
$arguments[1] = "Sarah"; // my $to
// 2. OR dynamically using foreach
$arguments = NULL;
foreach($datas as $data)
{
$arguments[] = $data;
}
// Calling saySomethingTo("how are you?", "Sarah")
call_user_func_array($functionName3, $arguments);
Dear Sarah, how are you?
Yay bye!
If you were in a object context trying to call a function dynamically please try something like this code bellow:
$this->{$variable}();
Following code can help to write dynamic function in PHP.
now the function name can be dynamically change by variable '$current_page'.
$current_page = 'home_page';
$function = #${$current_page . '_page_versions'};
$function = function() {
echo 'current page';
};
$function();
The easiest way to call a function safely using the name stored in a variable is,
//I want to call method deploy that is stored in functionname
$functionname = 'deploy';
$retVal = {$functionname}('parameters');
I have used like below to create migration tables in Laravel dynamically,
foreach(App\Test::$columns as $name => $column){
$table->{$column[0]}($name);
}
Considering some of the excellent answers given here, sometimes you need to be precise.
For example.
if a function has a return value eg (boolean,array,string,int,float
e.t.c).
if the function has no return value check
if the function exists
Let's look at its credit to some of the answers given.
Class Cars{
function carMake(){
return 'Toyota';
}
function carMakeYear(){
return 2020;
}
function estimatedPriceInDollar{
return 1500.89;
}
function colorList(){
return array("Black","Gold","Silver","Blue");
}
function carUsage(){
return array("Private","Commercial","Government");
}
function getCar(){
echo "Toyota Venza 2020 model private estimated price is 1500 USD";
}
}
We want to check if method exists and call it dynamically.
$method = "color List";
$class = new Cars();
//If the function have return value;
$arrayColor = method_exists($class, str_replace(' ', "", $method)) ? call_user_func(array($this, $obj)) : [];
//If the function have no return value e.g echo,die,print e.t.c
$method = "get Car";
if(method_exists($class, str_replace(' ', "", $method))){
call_user_func(array($class, $method))
}
Thanks
One unconventional approach, that came to my mind is, unless you are generating the whole code through some super ultra autonomous AI which writes itself, there are high chances that the functions which you want to "dynamically" call, are already defined in your code base. So why not just check for the string and do the infamous ifelse dance to summon the ...you get my point.
eg.
if($functionName == 'foo'){
foo();
} else if($functionName == 'bar'){
bar();
}
Even switch-case can be used if you don't like the bland taste of ifelse ladder.
I understand that there are cases where the "dynamically calling the function" would be an absolute necessity (Like some recursive logic which modifies itself). But most of the everyday trivial use-cases can just be dodged.
It weeds out a lot of uncertainty from your application, while giving you a chance to execute a fallback function if the string doesn't match any of the available functions' definition. IMHO.
I dont know why u have to use that, doesnt sound so good to me at all, but if there are only a small amount of functions, you could use a if/elseif construct.
I dont know if a direct solution is possible.
something like
$foo = "bar";
$test = "foo";
echo $$test;
should return bar, you can try around but i dont think this will work for functions

Class member reference to another object in PHP

First code and then the question:
class MyArray
{
private $arrayRef;
function __construct(&$array){
$this->arrayRef = $array;
}
function addElement($newElement){
$this->arrayRef[] = $newElement;
}
function print(){
print_r($this->arrayRef);
}
}
$array = ['first', 'second'];
$arrayObject = new MyArray($array);
$arrayObject->addElement('third');
print_r($array); // prints array containing 2 elements
echo '<br/>';
$arrayObject->print(); // prints array containing 3 elements
Class member $arrayRef, in this example doesn't work as a reference to another array provided in constructor. Argument in constructor is passed by reference, but I guess that doesn't make member $arrayRef also a reference to that array as well.
Why doesn't it work like that and how to make it work?
If you still don't get what I mean: first print_r prints array containing 2 elements, even thought it may be expected to contain 3.
When I pass third element to $arrayObject via addElement() I also want it to be added in the $array that I passed to constructor of class.
The answer is actually quite simple. Yes, you pass the array by reference via &$array but this reference gets lost when you assign/copy it to the member variable. To keep the reference, you can use the =& operator like so
$this->arrayRef =& $array;
See it work in this fiddle. You can read more about it in this question/answer (just look for reference).
Beware not to use &= (which does a bitwise operation) instead of =& (which assigns by reference).

Passing array instead of callback in array_filter

I'm looking at this example array_filter comment and he passes an argument to array_filter as
array_filter($subject, array(new array_ereg("image[0-9]{3}\.png"), 'ereg')
How is it that the callback accepts an array with multiple arguments one of them being the actual callback function
In PHP it is possible to represent a callable using an array in the following format.
array($object, 'methodName')
The documentation itself states:
A method of an instantiated object is passed as an array containing an object at index 0 and the method name at index 1.
It is quite common to see this used with the $this variable inside objects.
In your example, the first element of the array is created with new, and is the instantiated object required, and ereg is the method.
The array_filter functions expects a callable for it's second parameter.
PHP understands an array($instance, 'methodname') as callable for instance methods, and array('classname', 'staticmethodname') for static methods (or simple 'classname::staticmethod' since version 5.2.3 .
To extend other answers. In PHP >= 5.3, we can use closures.
$numbers = range(1,10);
$newNumbers = array_filter($numbers, function($value) {
return ($value & 1) === false;
});
// $newNumbers now contains only even integers. 2, 4, 6, 8, 10.
Have a look at the PHP: Callbacks page.
When an array is specified for a callable parameter, you are specifying an object and a method of that object. For example:
$object = new MyClass();
array_filter($input, array($object, 'myClassMethod'));
In the example you provided:
array_filter($subject, array(new array_ereg("image[0-9]{3}\.png"), 'ereg');
The new instance of array_ereg is the object and ereg is the method of the array_ereg class.

How do you know what parameters/arguments to put in a closure?

When do closures have parameters (or how do closures with parameters work)? I know that use() is used to import variables outside the anonymous function, but what about the parameter(s) of the closure itself?
An example of closures with parameters is currying:
function greeter($greeting)
{
return function($whom) use ($greeting) {
// greeting is the closed over variable
return "$greeting $whom";
};
}
$hello_greeter = greeter('hello');
echo $hello_greeter('world'); // will print 'hello world';
The greeter function will return a "half-implemented" function that will always start with the same greeting, followed by whatever is passed into it (e.g. the person to greet).
If you are using a function that accept an anonymous function as parameter, then check the doc of the function.
If the function is written by you, then you are the controller, you decide it.
use() is especially useful for functions that require a function as a parameter. It might be required that the passed function take only two parameters and that any extra parameter is simply ignored. In this case, use use() to "import" a variable from current scope to the anon function.
$myvar = 10;
$fun = function(&$val, $index) use ($myvar) {$val += $myvar;};
$testArray = array(1,2,3);
array_walk($testArray, $fun);
var_dump($testArray); // 11, 12, 13
Note: if your anon function signature was function(&$val, $index, $myvar) instead, you would get constant warnings when using your anon function with array_walk because that extra 3rd parameter is unused and undefined. So, use use() to pass in that extra parameter instead.
Edit: you can also pass in variables by reference in use()...
$myvar = 10;
$fun = function(&$val, $index) use (&$myvar) {$myvar = 1; $val += $myvar;};
$testArray = array(1,2,3);
array_walk($testArray, $fun);
var_dump($testArray); // 2, 3, 4
echo $myvar; // 1
Closures passed to PHP functions that should have parameters are detailed in the docs. A good example of this is array_walk(), which is used to apply the callback to an iterable:
$arr = array('a', 'b', 'c');
array_walk($arr, function($key, $val) {
echo $key . ' => ' . $val . "\n";
});
In the docs, the parameters that you should include on the callable passed to array_walk() are detailed under "Parameters." It says:
Typically, funcname takes on two parameters. The array parameter's value being the first, and the key/index second.
Often times you will find similar hints on other functions in the PHP docs. I was disappointed that the documentation for array_map() was not as detailed, but I can remember there being other functions that excepted callables that had sufficient closure parameter documentation.
If you are looking to write your own function that accepts closures (or other values that you can call) and dictates what parameters it must have, you can use the typehint callback in PHP 5.3 or callable in PHP 5.4.
function gobblesUpCallable(callable $func) {
call_user_func($func); // Use this, someone could pass in a callable string or array
}
However, to specify parameters, you'll need to use ReflectionClass or ReflectionFunction which means you probably forgo call_user_func().

How to call a function from a string stored in a variable?

I need to be able to call a function, but the function name is stored in a variable, is this possible? e.g:
function foo ()
{
//code here
}
function bar ()
{
//code here
}
$functionName = "foo";
// I need to call the function based on what is $functionName
$functionName() or call_user_func($functionName)
My favorite version is the inline version:
${"variableName"} = 12;
$className->{"propertyName"};
$className->{"methodName"}();
StaticClass::${"propertyName"};
StaticClass::{"methodName"}();
You can place variables or expressions inside the brackets too!
Solution: Use PHP7
Note: For a summarized version, see TL;DR at the end of the answer.
Old Methods
Update: One of the old methods explained here has been removed. Refer to other answers for explanation on other methods, it isn't covered here. By the way, if this answer doesn't help you, you should return upgrading your stuff. PHP 5.6 support has ended in January 2019 (now even PHP 7.2 and 7.3 are not being supported). See supported versions for more information.
As others mentioned, in PHP5 (and also in newer versions like PHP7) we could use variables as function names, use call_user_func() and call_user_func_array(), etc.
New Methods
As of PHP7, there are new ways introduced:
Note: Everything inside <something> brackets means one or more expressions to form something, e.g. <function_name> means expressions forming a function name.
Dynamic Function Call: Function Name On-the-fly
We can form a function name inside parentheses in just one go:
(<function_name>)(arguments);
For example:
function something(): string
{
return "something";
}
$bar = "some_thing";
(str_replace("_", "", $bar))(); // something
// Possible, too; but generally, not recommended, because makes your
// code more complicated
(str_replace("_", "", $bar))()();
Note: Although removing the parentheses around str_replace() is not an error, putting parentheses makes code more readable. However, you cannot do that sometimes, e.g. while using . operator. To be consistent, I recommend you to put the parentheses always.
Dynamic Function Call: Callable Property
A useful example would be in the context of objects: If you have stored a callable in a property, you have to call it this way:
($object->{<property_name>})();
As a simple example:
// Suppose we're in a class method context
($this->eventHandler)();
Obviously, calling it as $this->eventHandler() is plain wrong: By that you mean calling a method named eventHandler.
Dynamic Method Call: Method Name On-the-fly
Just like dynamic function calls, we can do the same way with method calls, surrounded by curly braces instead of parentheses (for extra forms, navigate to TL;DR section):
$object->{<method_name>}(arguments);
$object::{<method_name>}(arguments);
See it in an example:
class Foo
{
public function another(): string
{
return "something";
}
}
$bar = "another thing";
(new Something())->{explode(" ", $bar)[0]}(); // something
Dynamic Method Call: The Array Syntax
A more elegant way added in PHP7 is the following:
[<object>, <method_name>](arguments);
[<class_name>, <method_name>](arguments); // Static calls only
As an example:
class Foo
{
public function nonStaticCall()
{
echo "Non-static call";
}
public static function staticCall()
{
echo "Static call";
}
}
$x = new X();
[$x, "non" . "StaticCall"](); // Non-static call
[$x, "static" . "Call"](); // Static call
Note: The benefit of using this method over the previous one is that, you don't care about the call type (i.e. whether it's static or not).
Note: If you care about performance (and micro-optimizations), don't use this method. As I tested, this method is really slower than other methods (more than 10 times).
Extra Example: Using Anonymous Classes
Making things a bit complicated, you could use a combination of anonymous classes and the features above:
$bar = "SomeThing";
echo (new class {
public function something()
{
return 512;
}
})->{strtolower($bar)}(); // 512
TL;DR (Conclusion)
Generally, in PHP7, using the following forms are all possible:
// Everything inside `<something>` brackets means one or more expressions
// to form something
// Dynamic function call via function name
(<function_name>)(arguments);
// Dynamic function call on a callable property
($object->{<property_name>})(arguments);
// Dynamic method call on an object
$object->{<method_name>}(arguments);
$object::{<method_name>}(arguments);
// Dynamic method call on a dynamically-generated object
(<object>)->{<method_name>}(arguments);
(<object>)::{<method_name>}(arguments);
// Dynamic method call, statically
ClassName::{<method_name>}(arguments);
(<class_name>)::{<method_name>}(arguments);
// Dynamic method call, array-like (no different between static
// and non-static calls
[<object>, <method_name>](arguments);
// Dynamic method call, array-like, statically
[<class_name>, <method_name>](arguments);
Special thanks to this PHP talk.
Yes, it is possible:
function foo($msg) {
echo $msg."<br />";
}
$var1 = "foo";
$var1("testing 1,2,3");
Source: http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/php/2001/05/17/php_foundations.html?page=2
As already mentioned, there are a few ways to achieve this with possibly the safest method being call_user_func() or if you must you can also go down the route of $function_name(). It is possible to pass arguments using both of these methods as so
$function_name = 'foobar';
$function_name(arg1, arg2);
call_user_func_array($function_name, array(arg1, arg2));
If the function you are calling belongs to an object you can still use either of these
$object->$function_name(arg1, arg2);
call_user_func_array(array($object, $function_name), array(arg1, arg2));
However if you are going to use the $function_name() method it may be a good idea to test for the existence of the function if the name is in any way dynamic
if(method_exists($object, $function_name))
{
$object->$function_name(arg1, arg2);
}
A few years late, but this is the best manner now imho:
$x = (new ReflectionFunction("foo"))->getClosure();
$x();
In case someone else is brought here by google because they were trying to use a variable for a method within a class, the below is a code sample which will actually work. None of the above worked for my situation. The key difference is the & in the declaration of $c = & new... and &$c being passed in call_user_func.
My specific case is when implementing someone's code having to do with colors and two member methods lighten() and darken() from the csscolor.php class. For whatever reason, I wanted to have the same code be able to call lighten or darken rather than select it out with logic. This may be the result of my stubbornness to not just use if-else or to change the code calling this method.
$lightdark="lighten"; // or optionally can be darken
$color="fcc"; // a hex color
$percent=0.15;
include_once("csscolor.php");
$c = & new CSS_Color($color);
$rtn=call_user_func( array(&$c,$lightdark),$color,$percent);
Note that trying anything with $c->{...} didn't work. Upon perusing the reader-contributed content at the bottom of php.net's page on call_user_func, I was able to piece together the above. Also, note that $params as an array didn't work for me:
// This doesn't work:
$params=Array($color,$percent);
$rtn=call_user_func( array(&$c,$lightdark),$params);
This above attempt would give a warning about the method expecting a 2nd argument (percent).
For the sake of completeness, you can also use eval():
$functionName = "foo()";
eval($functionName);
However, call_user_func() is the proper way.
Dynamic function names and namespaces
Just to add a point about dynamic function names when using namespaces.
If you're using namespaces, the following won't work except if your function is in the global namespace:
namespace greetings;
function hello()
{
// do something
}
$myvar = "hello";
$myvar(); // interpreted as "\hello();"
What to do?
You have to use call_user_func() instead:
// if hello() is in the current namespace
call_user_func(__NAMESPACE__.'\\'.$myvar);
// if hello() is in another namespace
call_user_func('mynamespace\\'.$myvar);
Complementing the answer of #Chris K if you want to call an object's method, you can call it using a single variable with the help of a closure:
function get_method($object, $method){
return function() use($object, $method){
$args = func_get_args();
return call_user_func_array(array($object, $method), $args);
};
}
class test{
function echo_this($text){
echo $text;
}
}
$test = new test();
$echo = get_method($test, 'echo_this');
$echo('Hello'); //Output is "Hello"
I posted another example here
Use the call_user_func function.
What I learnt from this question and the answers. Thanks all!
Let say I have these variables and functions:
$functionName1 = "sayHello";
$functionName2 = "sayHelloTo";
$functionName3 = "saySomethingTo";
$friend = "John";
$datas = array(
"something"=>"how are you?",
"to"=>"Sarah"
);
function sayHello()
{
echo "Hello!";
}
function sayHelloTo($to)
{
echo "Dear $to, hello!";
}
function saySomethingTo($something, $to)
{
echo "Dear $to, $something";
}
To call function without arguments
// Calling sayHello()
call_user_func($functionName1);
Hello!
To call function with 1 argument
// Calling sayHelloTo("John")
call_user_func($functionName2, $friend);
Dear John, hello!
To call function with 1 or more arguments
This will be useful if you are dynamically calling your functions and each function have different number of arguments. This is my case that I have been looking for (and solved). call_user_func_array is the key
// You can add your arguments
// 1. statically by hard-code,
$arguments[0] = "how are you?"; // my $something
$arguments[1] = "Sarah"; // my $to
// 2. OR dynamically using foreach
$arguments = NULL;
foreach($datas as $data)
{
$arguments[] = $data;
}
// Calling saySomethingTo("how are you?", "Sarah")
call_user_func_array($functionName3, $arguments);
Dear Sarah, how are you?
Yay bye!
If you were in a object context trying to call a function dynamically please try something like this code bellow:
$this->{$variable}();
The easiest way to call a function safely using the name stored in a variable is,
//I want to call method deploy that is stored in functionname
$functionname = 'deploy';
$retVal = {$functionname}('parameters');
I have used like below to create migration tables in Laravel dynamically,
foreach(App\Test::$columns as $name => $column){
$table->{$column[0]}($name);
}
Following code can help to write dynamic function in PHP.
now the function name can be dynamically change by variable '$current_page'.
$current_page = 'home_page';
$function = #${$current_page . '_page_versions'};
$function = function() {
echo 'current page';
};
$function();
Considering some of the excellent answers given here, sometimes you need to be precise.
For example.
if a function has a return value eg (boolean,array,string,int,float
e.t.c).
if the function has no return value check
if the function exists
Let's look at its credit to some of the answers given.
Class Cars{
function carMake(){
return 'Toyota';
}
function carMakeYear(){
return 2020;
}
function estimatedPriceInDollar{
return 1500.89;
}
function colorList(){
return array("Black","Gold","Silver","Blue");
}
function carUsage(){
return array("Private","Commercial","Government");
}
function getCar(){
echo "Toyota Venza 2020 model private estimated price is 1500 USD";
}
}
We want to check if method exists and call it dynamically.
$method = "color List";
$class = new Cars();
//If the function have return value;
$arrayColor = method_exists($class, str_replace(' ', "", $method)) ? call_user_func(array($this, $obj)) : [];
//If the function have no return value e.g echo,die,print e.t.c
$method = "get Car";
if(method_exists($class, str_replace(' ', "", $method))){
call_user_func(array($class, $method))
}
Thanks
One unconventional approach, that came to my mind is, unless you are generating the whole code through some super ultra autonomous AI which writes itself, there are high chances that the functions which you want to "dynamically" call, are already defined in your code base. So why not just check for the string and do the infamous ifelse dance to summon the ...you get my point.
eg.
if($functionName == 'foo'){
foo();
} else if($functionName == 'bar'){
bar();
}
Even switch-case can be used if you don't like the bland taste of ifelse ladder.
I understand that there are cases where the "dynamically calling the function" would be an absolute necessity (Like some recursive logic which modifies itself). But most of the everyday trivial use-cases can just be dodged.
It weeds out a lot of uncertainty from your application, while giving you a chance to execute a fallback function if the string doesn't match any of the available functions' definition. IMHO.
I dont know why u have to use that, doesnt sound so good to me at all, but if there are only a small amount of functions, you could use a if/elseif construct.
I dont know if a direct solution is possible.
something like
$foo = "bar";
$test = "foo";
echo $$test;
should return bar, you can try around but i dont think this will work for functions

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