Reputation: 495
I can't seem to find anything of this, and was wondering if it's possible to store a function or function reference as a value for an array element. For e.g.
array("someFunc" => &x(), "anotherFunc" => $this->anotherFunc())
Thanks!
Upvotes: 15
Views: 35061
Reputation: 25745
check out PHP's call_user_func
. consider the below example.
consider two functions
function a($param)
{
return $param;
}
function b($param)
{
return $param;
}
$array = array('a' => 'first function param', 'b' => 'second function param');
now if you want to execute all the function in a sequence you can do it with a loop.
foreach($array as $functionName => $param) {
call_user_func($functioName, $param);
}
plus array can hold any data type, be it function call, nested arrays, object, string, integer etc. etc.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 21553
Yes, you can:
$array = array(
'func' => function($var) { return $var * 2; },
);
var_dump($array['func'](2));
This does, of course, require PHP anonymous function support, which arrived with PHP version 5.3.0. This is going to leave you with quite unreadable code though.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 13557
You can "reference" any function. A function reference is not a reference in the sense of "address in memory" or something. It's merely the name of the function.
<?php
$functions = array(
'regular' => 'strlen',
'class_function' => array('ClassName', 'functionName'),
'object_method' => array($object, 'methodName'),
'closure' => function($foo) {
return $foo;
},
);
// while this works
$functions['regular']();
// this doesn't
$functions['class_function']();
// to make this work across the board, you'll need either
call_user_func($functions['object_method'], $arg1, $arg2, $arg3);
// or
call_user_func_array($functions['object_method'], array($arg1, $arg2, $arg3));
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 5303
PHP supports the concept of variable functions, so you can do something like this:
function foo() { echo "bar"; }
$array = array('fun' => 'foo');
$array['fun']();
Yout can check more examples in manual.
Upvotes: 5