Reputation: 181
The Project I'm working on contains something like a wrapper for call_user_func(_array) which does some checks before execution. One of those checks is method_exists (In Case the supplied first argument is an instance of a class and the second is a method name) The other is_callable. The function will throw an exception if one of those checks fails.
My Code contains an array with function names (setFoo, setBar, etc.) and the php magic function for overloading (__call) which handles setting, replacing and deletion of certain variables (better certain array elements).
The Problem: method_exists will return false if the function is not defined.
Do I have any chance to get a true if the __call function does proper handling of the request?
Upvotes: 18
Views: 11673
Reputation: 96159
method_exists tries two things:
function foo() {}
type methods.get_method()
function and if it has invoke it to let the class implementation decide.You'd need the latter. But this get_method()
is not "extended" to the PHP script code, i.e. there is no way to let get_method() call some user defined PHP script code (And what would this PHP code return?).
So the answer to my best knowledge is: No, it's not possible (yet?).
The implementation of ZEND_FUNCTION(method_exists)
can be found in zend/zend_builtin_functions.c
and is I think fairly readable even if you don't know C but PHP.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 8862
If you are really sure that _call always has a fall-back, you can do:
if (method_exists($this, $method_name) || method_exists($this, '__call')) {
// Call of the method
}
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1245
__call
handles calls to methods that don't exist. method_exists
is an introspection method that checks the existence of a method.
How can __call
be determined to handle a method? I think you have to throw an exception manually in __call
if doesn't handle your request and catch the exception in the code that would otherwise use method_exists
. BadMethodCallException
exists for this purpose.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 9809
I'd be tempted to maybe use method_exists
in your __call
function and throw
an Exception
should this fail and wrap everything in a try
catch
block instead of using the is_callable
function.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 78598
Have a look at is_callable()
.
But no, if the __call()
method only handles some names, then you would need some other way of checking if the call will succeed.
Might I suggest a interface with the method canCall($function)
, or something? Then check if the class implements the interface. If it doesn't, just use is_callable()
.
Upvotes: 8