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Posted by ZeldorBlat on 05/02/07 22:07
On May 2, 6:02 pm, ZeldorBlat <zeldorb...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 2, 4:56 pm, Mark Stanton <m...@vowleyfarm.co.uk> wrote:
>
> > I'd like to implement one of these (a function table).
>
> > First I thought that execution through variable functions
> > ($foo='bar', $foo() executes the function 'bar') would work work, but
> > this seems to get upset when my function is actually a method of a
> > class.
>
> You can use variable function names with class methods. The following
> works just fine and echo's out "baz":
>
> class Foo {
> public function bar($x) {
> echo $x;
> }
>
> }
>
> $f = new Foo();
>
> $funcName = 'bar';
> $f->$funcName('baz');
>
>
>
> > Then I hoped that call_user_func(_array) would do the trick, but this
> > seems to get upset when the method uses "this", which is something of
> > a serious limitation it seems to me.
>
> call_user_func() can also be used with object methods (even when they
> reference "this"). The following also correctly echo's out "baz":
>
> class Foo {
> protected $x = 'baz';
>
> public function bar() {
> echo $this->x;
> }
>
> }
>
> $f = new Foo();
> call_user_func(array($f, 'bar'));
>
>
>
> > Anyone know ways around either or both of these apparent (to me)
> > problems?
>
> > Regards
> > Mark
>
> So these aren't really problems.
Correction. In the first case, that's an /object/ method. If you
want to call a /class/ (static) method that way, you would do it with
call_user_func like this (which I think is what you're trying to get
to):
class Foo {
public static function bar($x) {
echo $x;
}
}
call_user_func(array('Foo', 'bar'), 'baz');
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