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Posted by wayne on 10/04/04 11:23
Hi Marco,
The version of php I have is 4.3.10. Is there something
similar to the below example in the version I have?
Thanks.
On Sun, 2005-08-07 at 16:39 -0400, Marco Tabini wrote:
> On 8/7/05 4:24 PM, "Jasper Bryant-Greene" <jasper@bryant-greene.name> wrote:
>
> > Or if it's PHP 5 they might be using an __autoload() magic function
> > which gets called whenever a class that isn't declared is instantiated.
> > That function could be require()ing another file.
>
> Well, if it is PHP 5, then you can use introspection to find out where that
> class is declared:
>
> $className = get_class ($CFG);
> $cls = new ReflectionClass ($className);
>
> Echo "Class " . $className . " is defined in " .
> $cls->getFileName() . " between lines " . $cls->getStartLine() . " and " .
> $cls->getEndLine();
>
>
> Marco
>
> >
> > Jasper
> >
> >
> > Chris wrote:
> >> That isn't created by PHP, it must be declared in the code somewhere.
> >>
> >> Maybe there is an auto_prepend_file set?
> >>
> >> http://www.php.net/manual/en/ini.core.php#ini.auto-prepend-file
> >>
> >> Chris
> >>
> >> wayne wrote:
> >>
> >>> First, I'm new to PHP. I have a script that
> >>> has a piece of code that looks like this -
> >>> require_once($CFG->wwwroot . '/lib/mylib.php');
> >>> My question is this, I'm trying to find out
> >>> how the class $CGF was initiated.There are no
> >>> include or require statement before the statement.
> >>> Is $CFG a global variable? If how does it get
> >>> initiated?
> >>> Tnaks.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
>
> --
> Marco Tabini
> President & CEO
>
> Marco Tabini & Associates, Inc.
> 28 Bombay Ave.
> Toronto, ON M3H 1B7
> Canada
>
> Phone: +1 (416) 630-6202
> Fax: +1 (416) 630-5057
>
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