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通过参数列表可以传递信息到函数,即以逗号作为分隔符的表达式列表。参数是从左向右求值的。
PHP 支持按值传递参数(默认),通过引用传递参数以及默认参数。也支持可变长度参数列表。
Example #1 向函数传递数组
<?php
function takes_array ( $input )
{
echo " $input [ 0 ] + $input [ 1 ] = " , $input [ 0 ]+ $input [ 1 ];
}
?>
默认情况下,函数参数通过值传递(因而即使在函数内部改变参数的值,它并不会改变函数外部的值)。如果希望允许函数修改它的参数值,必须通过引用传递参数。
如果想要函数的一个参数总是通过引用传递,可以在函数定义中该参数的前面加上符号 &:
Example #2 用引用传递函数参数
<?php
function add_some_extra (& $string )
{
$string .= 'and something extra.' ;
}
$str = 'This is a string, ' ;
add_some_extra ( $str );
echo $str ; // outputs 'This is a string, and something extra.'
?>
函数可以定义 C++ 风格的标量参数默认值,如下所示:
Example #3 在函数中使用默认参数
<?php
function makecoffee ( $type = "cappuccino" )
{
return "Making a cup of $type .\n" ;
}
echo makecoffee ();
echo makecoffee ( null );
echo makecoffee ( "espresso" );
?>
以上例程会输出:
Making a cup of cappuccino. Making a cup of . Making a cup of espresso.
PHP 还允许使用数组 array 和特殊类型 NULL
作为默认参数,例如:
Example #4 使用非标量类型作为默认参数
<?php
function makecoffee ( $types = array( "cappuccino" ), $coffeeMaker = NULL )
{
$device = is_null ( $coffeeMaker ) ? "hands" : $coffeeMaker ;
return "Making a cup of " . join ( ", " , $types ). " with $device .\n" ;
}
echo makecoffee ();
echo makecoffee (array( "cappuccino" , "lavazza" ), "teapot" );
?>
默认值必须是常量表达式,不能是诸如变量,类成员,或者函数调用等。
注意当使用默认参数时,任何默认参数必须放在任何非默认参数的右侧;否则,函数将不会按照预期的情况工作。考虑下面的代码片断:
Example #5 函数默认参数的不正确用法
<?php
function makeyogurt ( $type = "acidophilus" , $flavour )
{
return "Making a bowl of $type $flavour .\n" ;
}
echo makeyogurt ( "raspberry" ); // won't work as expected
?>
以上例程会输出:
Warning: Missing argument 2 in call to makeyogurt() in /usr/local/etc/httpd/htdocs/phptest/functest.html on line 41 Making a bowl of raspberry .
现在,比较上面的例子和这个例子:
Example #6 函数默认参数正确的用法
<?php
function makeyogurt ( $flavour , $type = "acidophilus" )
{
return "Making a bowl of $type $flavour .\n" ;
}
echo makeyogurt ( "raspberry" ); // works as expected
?>
以上例程会输出:
Making a bowl of acidophilus raspberry.
Note: 自 PHP 5 起,传引用的参数也可以有默认值。
Note:
Type declarations were also known as type hints in PHP 5.
Type declarations allow functions to require that parameters are of a certain type at call time. If the given value is of the incorrect type, then an error is generated: in PHP 5, this will be a recoverable fatal error, while PHP 7 will throw a TypeError exception.
To specify a type declaration, the type name should be added before the
parameter name. The declaration can be made to accept NULL
values if
the default value of the parameter is set to NULL
.
Type | Description | Minimum PHP version |
---|---|---|
Class/interface name | The parameter must be an instanceof the given class or interface name. | PHP 5.0.0 |
array | The parameter must be an array . | PHP 5.1.0 |
callable | The parameter must be a valid callable . | PHP 5.4.0 |
bool | The parameter must be a boolean value. | PHP 7.0.0 |
float | The parameter must be a float ing point number. | PHP 7.0.0 |
int | The parameter must be an integer . | PHP 7.0.0 |
string | The parameter must be a string . | PHP 7.0.0 |
Example #7 Basic class type declaration
<?php
class C {}
class D extends C {}
// This doesn't extend C.
class E {}
function f ( C $c ) {
echo get_class ( $c ). "\n" ;
}
f (new C );
f (new D );
f (new E );
?>
以上例程会输出:
C DFatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Argument 1 passed to f() must be an instance of C, instance of E given, called in - on line 14 and defined in -:8 Stack trace: #0 -(14): f(Object(E)) #1 {main} thrown in - on line 8
Example #8 Basic interface type declaration
<?php
interface I { public function f (); }
class C implements I { public function f () {} }
// This doesn't implement I.
class E {}
function f ( I $i ) {
echo get_class ( $i ). "\n" ;
}
f (new C );
f (new E );
?>
以上例程会输出:
CFatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Argument 1 passed to f() must implement interface I, instance of E given, called in - on line 13 and defined in -:8 Stack trace: #0 -(13): f(Object(E)) #1 {main} thrown in - on line 8
Example #9 Nullable type declaration
<?php
class C {}
function f ( C $c = null ) {
var_dump ( $c );
}
f (new C );
f ( null );
?>
以上例程会输出:
object(C)#1 (0) { } NULL
By default, PHP will coerce values of the wrong type into the expected scalar type if possible. For example, a function that is given an integer for a parameter that expects a string will get a variable of type string .
It is possible to enable strict mode on a per-file basis. In strict mode, only a variable of exact type of the type declaration will be accepted, or a TypeError will be thrown. The only exception to this rule is that an integer may be given to a function expecting a float .
To enable strict mode, the declare statement is used with the strict_types declaration:
Enabling strict mode will also affect return type declarations.
Note:
Strict typing applies to function calls made from within the file with strict typing enabled, not to the functions declared within that file. If a file without strict typing enabled makes a call to a function that was defined in a file with strict typing, the caller's preference (weak typing) will be respected, and the value will be coerced.
Note:
Strict typing is only defined for scalar type declarations, and as such, requires PHP 7.0.0 or later, as scalar type declarations were added in that version.
Example #10 Strict typing
<?php
declare( strict_types = 1 );
function sum ( int $a , int $b ) {
return $a + $b ;
}
var_dump ( sum ( 1 , 2 ));
var_dump ( sum ( 1.5 , 2.5 ));
?>
以上例程会输出:
int(3)Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Argument 1 passed to sum() must be of the type integer, float given, called in - on line 9 and defined in -:4 Stack trace: #0 -(9): sum(1.5, 2.5) #1 {main} thrown in - on line 4
Example #11 Weak typing
<?php
function sum ( int $a , int $b ) {
return $a + $b ;
}
var_dump ( sum ( 1 , 2 ));
// These will be coerced to integers: note the output below!
var_dump ( sum ( 1.5 , 2.5 ));
?>
以上例程会输出:
int(3) int(3)
Example #12 Catching TypeError
<?php
declare( strict_types = 1 );
function sum ( int $a , int $b ) {
return $a + $b ;
}
try {
var_dump ( sum ( 1 , 2 ));
var_dump ( sum ( 1.5 , 2.5 ));
} catch ( TypeError $e ) {
echo 'Error: ' . $e -> getMessage ();
}
?>
以上例程会输出:
int(3) Error: Argument 1 passed to sum() must be of the type integer, float given, called in - on line 10
PHP 在用户自定义函数中支持可变数量的参数列表。在 PHP 5.6 及以上的版本中,由 ... 语法实现;在 PHP 5.5 及更早版本中,使用函数 func_num_args() , func_get_arg() ,和 func_get_args() 。
In PHP 5.6 and later, argument lists may include the ... token to denote that the function accepts a variable number of arguments. The arguments will be passed into the given variable as an array; for example:
Example #13 Using ... to access variable arguments
<?php
function sum (... $numbers ) {
$acc = 0 ;
foreach ( $numbers as $n ) {
$acc += $n ;
}
return $acc ;
}
echo sum ( 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 );
?>
以上例程会输出:
10
You can also use ... when calling functions to unpack an array or Traversable variable or literal into the argument list:
Example #14 Using ... to provide arguments
<?php
function add ( $a , $b ) {
return $a + $b ;
}
echo add (...[ 1 , 2 ]). "\n" ;
$a = [ 1 , 2 ];
echo add (... $a );
?>
以上例程会输出:
3 3
You may specify normal positional arguments before the ... token. In this case, only the trailing arguments that don't match a positional argument will be added to the array generated by ....
It is also possible to add a type hint before the ... token. If this is present, then all arguments captured by ... must be objects of the hinted class.
Example #15 Type hinted variable arguments
<?php
function total_intervals ( $unit , DateInterval ... $intervals ) {
$time = 0 ;
foreach ( $intervals as $interval ) {
$time += $interval -> $unit ;
}
return $time ;
}
$a = new DateInterval ( 'P1D' );
$b = new DateInterval ( 'P2D' );
echo total_intervals ( 'd' , $a , $b ). ' days' ;
// This will fail, since null isn't a DateInterval object.
echo total_intervals ( 'd' , null );
?>
以上例程会输出:
3 days Catchable fatal error: Argument 2 passed to total_intervals() must be an instance of DateInterval, null given, called in - on line 14 and defined in - on line 2
Finally, you may also pass variable arguments by reference by prefixing the ... with an ampersand (&).
No special syntax is required to note that a function is variadic; however access to the function's arguments must use func_num_args() , func_get_arg() and func_get_args() .
The first example above would be implemented as follows in PHP 5.5 and earlier:
Example #16 Accessing variable arguments in PHP 5.5 and earlier
<?php
function sum () {
$acc = 0 ;
foreach ( func_get_args () as $n ) {
$acc += $n ;
}
return $acc ;
}
echo sum ( 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 );
?>
以上例程会输出:
10
[#1] ohcc at 163 dot com [2015-11-08 09:23:50]
As of PHP 5.6, you can use an array as arguments when calling a function with the ... $args syntax.
<?php
$args = array('wu','WU','wuxiancheng.cn');
$string = str_replace(...$args);
echo $string;
?>
Ha ha, is that interesting and powerful?
Also you can use it like this
<?php
$args = array('WU','wuxiancheng.cn');
$string = str_replace('wu', ...$args);
echo $string;
?>
It also can be used to define a user function.
<?php
function wxc ($arg1, $arg2, ...$otherArgs){
echo '<pre>';
print_r($otherArgs);
print_r(func_get_args());
echo '</pre>';
}
wxc (1, 2, ...array(3,4,5));
?>
REMEMBER this: ... $args is not supported in PHP 5.5 and older versions.
[#2] d_maley at hotmail dot com [2015-08-26 09:12:15]
If you define your functions in the following way, you can call them whilst only specifying the default parameters you need
1. Define your function with its mandatory parameters, and an optional array
2. Declare your optional parameters as local variables
3. The crux: replace the value of any optional parameters that you have passed via the array, using PHP's facility to interpret variable variable names. This line is identical for every function
4. Call the function, passing its mandatory parameters, and only those optional parameters that you require
For example,
function test_params($a, $b, $arrOptionalParams = array()) {
$c = 'sat';
$d = 'mat';
foreach($arrOptionalParams as $key => $value) ${$key} = $value;
echo "$a $b $c on the $d";
}
and then call it like this
test_params('The', 'dog', array('c' => 'stood', 'd' => 'donkey'));
test_params('The', 'cat', array('d' => 'donkey'));
test_params('A', 'dog', array('c' => 'stood'));
Results:
The dog stood on the donkey
The cat sat on the donkey
A dog stood on the mat
[#3] rich at richware dot net [2015-05-08 17:27:17]
How to pass a class as an argument? This is simple:
<?php
class TMath {
private $_Total;
function Sum() {
$this->_Total = 0;
foreach (func_get_args() as $n) {
$this->_Total += $n;
}
}
function Total() {
return $this->_Total;
}
}
$myMath = new TMath();
$myMath->Sum(1,2,3);
ShowTotal($myMath);
function ShowTotal($aMath) {
echo $aMath->Total().'<br/>';
}
[#4] php at richardneill dot org [2015-03-28 19:24:09]
To experiment on performance of pass-by-reference and pass-by-value, I used this script. Conclusions are below.
#!/usr/bin/php
<?php
function sum($array,$max){ //For Reference, use: "&$array"
$sum=0;
for ($i=0; $i<2; $i++){
#$array[$i]++; //Uncomment this line to modify the array within the function.
$sum += $array[$i];
}
return ($sum);
}
$max = 1E7 //10 M data points.
$data = range(0,$max,1);
$start = microtime(true);
for ($x = 0 ; $x < 100; $x++){
$sum = sum($data, $max);
}
$end = microtime(true);
echo "Time: ".($end - $start)." s\n";
?>
[#5] lucas dot ekrause at gmail dot com [2014-06-18 08:40:43]
In addition to jcaplan@bogus.amazon.com??s comment (http://www.php.net/manual/de/functions.arguments.php#62803) you could also simply write
<?php
function f($x=4){echo $x."\n";}
function g($x=null){for($i=0; $i<2; $i++){call_user_func_array("f", !is_null($x) ? array($x) : array());}}
?>
[#6] aasasdasdf at yandex dot ru [2014-04-12 12:34:22]
As of PHP 5.5.10, it seems that a variable will be separated from its value if defined right in a function call:
php > error_reporting(E_ALL);
php > function a(&$b) {$b = 1;}
php > a($q = 2); var_dump($q);
Strict Standards: Only variables should be passed by reference in php shell code on line 1
int(2)
php > $w = 3; a($w); var_dump($w);
int(1)
Notice that it's still fine to use a variable that is not defined at all:
php > a($e); var_dump($e);
int(1)
[#7] Horst Schirmeier [2014-01-08 11:58:51]
Editor's note: what is expected here by the parser is a non-evaluated expression. An operand and two constants requires evaluation, which is not done by the parser. However, this feature is included as of PHP 5.6.0. See this page for more information: http://php.net/migration56.new-features#migration56.new-features.const-scalar-exprs
--------
"The default value must be a constant expression" is misleading (or even wrong). PHP 5.4.4 fails to parse this function definition:
function htmlspecialchars_latin1($s, $flags = ENT_COMPAT | ENT_HTML401) {}
This yields a " PHP Parse error: syntax error, unexpected '|', expecting ')' " although ENT_COMPAT|ENT_HTML401 is certainly what a compiler-affine person would call a "constant expression".
The obvious workaround is to use a single special value ($flags = NULL) as the default, and to set it to the desired value in the function's body (if ($flags === NULL) { $flags = ENT_COMPAT | ENT_HTML401; }).
[#8] post at auge8472 dot de [2013-07-18 20:48:47]
I needed a way to decide between two possible values for one function parameter. I didn't want to decide it before calling the function but wanted to do the constraint inside the function call.
$foo = 1;
$bar = 2;
function foobar($val) {
echo $val;
}
foobar(isset($foo) ? $foo : $bar);
// output: 1
$bar = 2;
function foobar($val) {
echo $val;
}
foobar(isset($foo) ? $foo : $bar);
// output: 2
[#9] ravenswd at gmail dot com [2013-07-08 14:30:14]
Be careful when passing arguments by reference, it can cause unexpected side-effects if one is not careful.
I had a program designed to sweep through directories and subdirectories and report on the total number of files, and the total size of all files. Since it needed to return two values, I used variables passed by reference.
In one spot in the program, I didn't need the values of those variables after they were returned, so I just used a garbage variable named $ignore instead. This caused a curious bug which took me a while to track down, because the effects of the bug were in a different part of the program than the place where I had made a mistake.
Since the same variable was used for both parameters passed by reference, they ended up both pointing to the same physical location in memory, so changing one of them caused both of them to change. The code below is an excerpt of my program, stripped down to just the few lines necessary to illustrate what was happening:
<?php
sweep ($ignore, $ignore);
// no errors occur here
function sweep ( &$filecount, &$bytecount ) {
$filecount = 1;
$bytecount = 1024;
print "Files: $filecount - Size: $bytecount"; // prints "Files: 1024 - Size: 1024"
}
?>
[#10] jacob at jacobweber dot com [2011-06-13 14:05:56]
This page states:
"Note that when using default arguments, any defaults should be on the right side of any non-default arguments; otherwise, things will not work as expected."
There seems to be one exception to this. Say you're using type-hinting for an argument, but you want to allow it to be NULL, and you want additional required arguments to the right of it. PHP allows this, as long as you give it the type-hinted argument a default value of NULL. For example:
<?php
function sample(ClassA $a = NULL, $b) {
}
sample(new ClassA(), ''); // success
sample(new ClassB(), ''); // failure; wrong type
sample(NULL, ''); // success
sample(new ClassA()); // failure; missing second argument
?>
[#11] carlos at wfmh dot org dot pl dot REMOVE dot COM [2010-06-15 04:48:44]
You can use (very) limited signatures for your functions, specifing type of arguments allowed.
For example:
public function Right( My_Class $a, array $b )
tells first argument have to by object of My_Class, second an array. My_Class means that you can pass also object of class that either extends My_Class or implements (if My_Class is abstract class) My_Class. If you need exactly My_Class you need to either make it final, or add some code to check what $a really.
Also note, that (unfortunately) "array" is the only built-in type you can use in signature. Any other types i.e.:
public function Wrong( string $a, boolean $b )
will cause an error, because PHP will complain that $a is not an *object* of class string (and $b is not an object of class boolean).
So if you need to know if $a is a string or $b bool, you need to write some code in your function body and i.e. throw exception if you detect type mismatch (or you can try to cast if it's doable).
[#12] rburnap at intelligent dash imaging dot com [2010-05-13 17:19:17]
This may be helpful when you need to call an arbitrary function known only at runtime:
You can call a function as a variable name.
<?php
function foo(){
echo"\nfoo()";
}
function callfunc($x, $y = '')
{
if( $y=='' )
{
if( $x=='' )
echo "\nempty";
else $x();
}
else
$y->$x();
}
class cbar {
public function fcatch(){ echo "\nfcatch"; }
}
$x = '';
callfunc($x);
$x = 'foo';
callfunc($x);
$o = new cbar();
$x = 'fcatch';
callfunc($x, $o);
echo "\n\n";
?>
The code will output
empty
foo()
fcatch
[#13] mracky at pacbell dot net [2010-03-29 09:40:49]
Nothing was written here about argument types as part of the function definition.
When working with classes, the class name can be used as argument type. This acts as a reminder to the user of the class, as well as a prototype for php control. (At least in php 5 -- did not check 4).
<?php
class foo {
public $data;
public function __construct($dd)
{
$this->data = $dd;
}
};
class test {
public $bar;
public function __construct(foo $arg) // Strict typing for argument
{
$this->bar = $arg;
}
public function dump()
{
echo $this->bar->data . "\n";
}
};
$A = new foo(25);
$Test1 = new test($A);
$Test1->dump();
$Test2 = new test(10); // wrong argument for testing
?>
outputs:
25
PHP Fatal error: Argument 1 passed to test::__construct() must be an object of class foo, called in testArgType.php on line 27 and defined in testArgType.php on line 13
[#14] pigiman at gmail dot com [2010-03-23 09:37:11]
Hey,
I started to learn for the Zend Certificate exam a few days ago and I got stuck with one unanswered-well question.
This is the question:
??Absent any actual need for choosing one method over the other, does passing arrays by value to a read-only function reduce performance compared to passing them by reference???
This question answered by Zend support team at Zend.com:
"A copy of the original $array is created within the function scope. Once the function terminates, the scope is removed and the copy of $array with it." (By massimilianoc)
Have a nice day!
Shaked KO
[#15] allankelly at gmail dot com [2009-03-21 14:34:38]
I like to pass an associative array as an argument. This is reminiscent of a Perl technique and can be tested with is_array. For example:
<?php
function div( $opt )
{
$class = '';
$text = '';
if( is_array( $opt ) )
{
foreach( $opt as $k => $v )
{
switch( $k )
{
case 'class': $class = "class = '$v'";
break;
case 'text': $text = $v;
break;
}
}
}
else
{
$text = $opt;
}
return "<div $class>$text</div>";
}
?>
[#16] herenvardoREMOVEatSTUFFgmailINdotCAPScom [2009-01-17 12:48:55]
There is a nice trick to emulate variables/function calls/etc as default values:
<?php
$myVar = "Using a variable as a default value!";
function myFunction($myArgument=null) {
if($myArgument===null)
$myArgument = $GLOBALS["myVar"];
echo $myArgument;
}
// Outputs "Hello World!":
myFunction("Hello World!");
// Outputs "Using a variable as a default value!":
myFunction();
// Outputs the same again:
myFunction(null);
// Outputs "Changing the variable affects the function!":
$myVar = "Changing the variable affects the function!";
myFunction();
?>
In general, you define the default value as null (or whatever constant you like), and then check for that value at the start of the function, computing the actual default if needed, before using the argument for actual work.
Building upon this, it's also easy to provide fallback behaviors when the argument given is not valid: simply put a default that is known to be invalid in the prototype, and then check for general validity instead of a specific value: if the argument is not valid (either not given, so the default is used, or an invalid value was given), the function computes a (valid) default to use.
[#17] Don dot hosek at gmail dot com [2007-11-20 17:50:31]
Actually the use of class or global constants does buy us something. It helps enforce the DRY (don't repeat yourself) principle.
[#18] conciseusa at yahoo[nospammm] dot com [2007-04-22 20:03:49]
With regards to:
It is also possible to force a parameter type using this syntax. I couldn't see it in the documentation.
function foo(myclass par) { }
I think you are referring to Type Hinting. It is documented here: http://ch2.php.net/language.oop5.typehinting
[#19] pdenny at magmic dot com [2007-02-18 09:43:09]
Note that constants can also be used as default argument values
so the following code:
define('TEST_CONSTANT','Works!');
function testThis($var=TEST_CONSTANT) {
echo "Passing constants as default values $var";
}
testThis();
will produce :
Passing constants as default values Works!
(I tried this in both PHP 4 and 5)
[#20] John [2006-11-15 15:20:50]
This might be documented somewhere OR obvious to most, but when passing an argument by reference (as of PHP 5.04) you can assign a value to an argument variable in the function call. For example:
function my_function($arg1, &$arg2) {
if ($arg1 == true) {
$arg2 = true;
}
}
my_function(true, $arg2 = false);
echo $arg2;
outputs 1 (true)
my_function(false, $arg2 = false);
echo $arg2;
outputs 0 (false)
[#21] keuleu at hotmail dot com [2006-10-19 02:59:39]
I ran into the problem that jcaplan mentionned. I had just finished building 2 handler classes and one interface.
During my testing I realized that my handlers were not initializing their variables to their default values when my interface was calling them with 'null' values:
this is a simplified illustration:
<?php
function some_function($v1='value1',$v2='value2',$v3='value3'){
echo $v1.', ';
echo $v2.', ';
echo $v3;
}
some_function(); //this will behave as expected, displaying 'value1, value2, value3'
some_function(null,null,null); //this on the other hand will display ', ,' since the variables will take the null value.
?>
I came to about the same conclusion as jcaplan. To force your function parameters to take a default value when a null is passed you need to include a conditionnal assignment inside the function definition.
<?php
function some_function($v1='value1',$v2='value1',$v3=null){
$v1=(is_null($v1)?'value1':$v1);
$v2=(is_null($v2)?'value2':$v2);
$v3=(is_null($v3)?'value3':$v3);
echo $v1;
echo $v2;
echo $v3;
}
?>
[#22] jcaplan at bogus dot amazon dot com [2006-03-09 15:11:02]
In function calls, PHP clearly distinguishes between missing arguments and present but empty arguments. Thus:
<?php
function f( $x = 4 ) { echo $x . "\\n"; }
f(); // prints 4
f( null ); // prints blank line
f( $y ); // $y undefined, prints blank line
?>
The utility of the optional argument feature is thus somewhat diminished. Suppose you want to call the function f many times from function g, allowing the caller of g to specify if f should be called with a specific value or with its default value:
<?php
function f( $x = 4 ) {echo $x . "\\n"; }
// option 1: cut and paste the default value from f's interface into g's
function g( $x = 4 ) { f( $x ); f( $x ); }
// option 2: branch based on input to g
function g( $x = null ) { if ( !isset( $x ) ) { f(); f() } else { f( $x ); f( $x ); } }
?>
Both options suck.
The best approach, it seems to me, is to always use a sentinel like null as the default value of an optional argument. This way, callers like g and g's clients have many options, and furthermore, callers always know how to omit arguments so they can omit one in the middle of the parameter list.
<?php
function f( $x = null ) { if ( !isset( $x ) ) $x = 4; echo $x . "\\n"; }
function g( $x = null ) { f( $x ); f( $x ); }
f(); // prints 4
f( null ); // prints 4
f( $y ); // $y undefined, prints 4
g(); // prints 4 twice
g( null ); // prints 4 twice
g( 5 ); // prints 5 twice
?>
[#23] ksamvel at gmail dot com [2006-02-07 07:55:07]
by default Classes constructor does not have any arguments. Using small trick with func_get_args() and other relative functions constructor becomes a function w/ args (tested in php 5.1.2). Check it out:
class A {
public function __construct() {
echo func_num_args() . "<br>";
var_dump( func_get_args());
echo "<br>";
}
}
$oA = new A();
$oA = new A( 1, 2, 3, "txt");
Output:
0
array(0) { }
4
array(4) { [0]=> int(1) [1]=> int(2) [2]=> int(3) [3]=> string(3) "txt" }
[#24] Sergio Santana: ssantana at tlaloc dot imta dot mx [2005-10-31 14:59:12]
PASSING A "VARIABLE-LENGTH ARGUMENT LIST OF REFERENCES" TO A FUNCTION
As of PHP 5, Call-time pass-by-reference has been deprecated, this represents no problem in most cases, since instead of calling a function like this:
myfunction($arg1, &$arg2, &$arg3);
you can call it
myfunction($arg1, $arg2, $arg3);
provided you have defined your function as
function myfuncion($a1, &$a2, &$a3) { // so &$a2 and &$a3 are
// declared to be refs.
... <function-code>
}
However, what happens if you wanted to pass an undefined number of references, i.e., something like:
myfunction(&$arg1, &$arg2, ..., &$arg-n);?
This doesn't work in PHP 5 anymore.
In the following code I tried to amend this by using the
array() language-construct as the actual argument in the
call to the function.
<?php
function aa ($A) {
// This function increments each
// "pseudo-argument" by 2s
foreach ($A as &$x) {
$x += 2;
}
}
$x = 1; $y = 2; $z = 3;
aa(array(&$x, &$y, &$z));
echo "--$x--$y--$z--\n";
// This will output:
// --3--4--5--
?>
I hope this is useful.
Sergio.
[#25] grinslives13 at hotmail dot com~=s/i/ee/g [2005-09-24 22:55:17]
Given that we have two coding styles:
#
# Code (A)
#
funtion foo_a (&$var)
{
$var *= 2;
return $var;
}
foo_a($a);
#
# Code (B)
#
function foo_b ($var)
{
$var *= 2;
return $var;
}
foo_b(&$a);
I personally wouldn't recommend (B) - I think it strange why php would support such a convention as it would have violated foo_b's design - its use would not do justice to its function prototype. And thinking about such use, I might have to think about copying all variables instead of working directly on them...
Coding that respects function prototypes strictly would, I believe, result in code that is more intuitive to read. Of course, in php <=4, not being able to use default values with references, we can't do this that we can do in C:
#
# optional return-value parameters
#
int foo_c (int var, int *ret)
{
var *= 2;
if (ret) *ret = var;
return var;
}
foo_c(2, NULL);
Of course, since variables are "free" anyway, we can always get away with it by using dummy variables...
zlel
[#26] nate at natemurray dot com [2005-08-30 15:15:31]
Of course you can fake a global variable for a default argument by something like this:
<?php
function self_url($text, $page, $per_page = NULL) {
$per_page = ($per_page == NULL) ? $GLOBALS['gPER_PAGE'] : $per_page; # setup a default value of per page
return sprintf("<a href=%s?page=%s&perpage=%s>%s</a>", $_SERVER["PHP_SELF"], $page, $per_page, $text);
}
?>
[#27] Angelina Bell [2005-07-25 12:40:09]
It is so easy to create a constant that the php novice might do so accidently while attempting to call a function with no arguments. For example:
<?php
function LogoutUser(){
// destroy the session, the cookie, and the session ID
blah blah blah;
return true;
}
function SessionCheck(){
blah blah blah;
// check for session timeout
...
if ($timeout) LogoutUser; // should be LogoutUser();
}
?>
OOPS! I don't notice my typo, the SessionCheck function
doesn't work, and it takes me all afternoon to figure out why not!
<?php
LogoutUser;
print "new constant LogoutUser is " . LogoutUser;
?>
[#28] balint , at ./ atres &*( ath !# cx [2005-06-30 02:59:49]
(in reply to benk at NOSPAM dot icarz dot com / 24-Jun-2005 04:21)
I could make use of this assignment, as below, to have a permanently existing, but changing data block (because it is used by many other classes), where the order or the refreshed contents are needed for the others: (DB init done by one, an other changed the DB, and thereafter all others need to use the other DB without creating new instances, or creating a log array in one, and we would like to append the new debug strings to the array, atmany places.)
class xyz {
var argN = array();
function xyz($argN) {
$this->argN = &$argN;
}
function etc($text) {
array_push($this->argN, $text);
}
}
class abc {
var argM = array();
function abc($argM) {
$this->argM = &$argM;
}
function etc($text) {
array_push($this->argM, $text);
}
}
$messages=array("one", "two");
$x = new xyz(&$messages);
$x->etc("test");
$a = new abc(&$messages);
$a->etc("tset");
...
[#29] csaba at alum dot mit dot edu [2005-01-26 04:58:11]
Argument evaluation left to right means that you can save yourself a temporary variable in the example below whereas $current = $prior + ($prior=$current) is just the same as $current *= 2;
function Sum() { return array_sum(func_get_args()); }
function Fib($n,$current=1,$prior=0) {
for (;--$n;) $current = Sum($prior,$prior=$current);
return $current;
}
Csaba Gabor
PS. You could, of course, just use array_sum(array(...)) in place of Sum(...)
[#30] heck AT fas DOT harvard DOT edu [2004-03-24 17:49:49]
I have some functions that I'd like to be able to pass arguments two ways: Either as an argument list of variable length (e.g. func(1, 2, 3, 4)) or as an array (e.g., func(array(1,2,3,4)). Only the latter can be constructed on the fly (e.g., func($ar)), but the syntax of the former can be neater.
The way to do it is to begin the function as follows:
$args = func_get_args();
if (is_array ($args[0]))
$args = $args[0];
Then one can just use $args as the list of arguments.
[#31] thesibster at hotmail dot com [2003-06-30 11:43:27]
Call-time pass-by-ref arguments are deprecated and may not be supported later, so doing this:
----
function foo($str) {
$str = "bar";
}
$mystr = "hello world";
foo(&$mystr);
----
will produce a warning when using the recommended php.ini file. The way I ended up using for optional pass-by-ref args is to just pass an unused variable when you don't want to use the resulting parameter value:
----
function foo(&$str) {
$str = "bar";
}
foo($_unused_);
----
Note that trying to pass a value of NULL will produce an error.
[#32] guillaume dot goutaudier at eurecom dot fr [2002-07-19 12:15:33]
Concerning default values for arguments passed by reference:
I often use that trick:
func($ref=$defaultValue) {
$ref = "new value";
}
func(&$var);
print($var) // echo "new value"
Setting $defaultValue to null enables you to write functions with optional arguments which, if given, are to be modified.
[#33] wls at wwco dot com [2001-11-20 11:29:08]
Follow up to resource passing:
It appears that if you have defined the resource in the same file
as the function that uses it, you can get away with the global trick.
Here's the failure case:
include "functions_doing_globals.php"
$conn = openDatabaseConnection();
invoke_function_doing_global_conn();
...that it fails.
Perhaps it's some strange scoping problem with include/require, or
globals trying to resolve before the variable is defined, rather
than at function execution.
[#34] rwillmann at nocomment dot sk [2001-06-21 15:05:20]
There is no way how to deal with calling by reference when variable lengths argument list are passed.
<br>Only solutions is to use construction like this:<br>
function foo($args) {<br>
...
}
foo(array(&$first, &$second));
Above example pass by value a list of references to other variables :-)
It is courios, becouse when you call a function with arguments passed via &$parameter syntax, func_get_args returns array of copies :-(
rwi
[#35] artiebob at go dot com [2001-02-25 13:48:33]
here is the code to pass a user defined function as an argument. Just like in the usort method.
<?php
func2("func1");
function func1 ($arg){
print ("Hello $arg");
}
function func2 ($arg1){
$arg1("World"); //Does the same thing as the next line
call_user_func ($arg1, "World");
}
?>
[#36] david at petshelter dot net [2001-01-24 23:23:38]
With reference to the note about extract() by dietricha@subpop.com:
He is correct and this is great! What he does not say explicitly is that the extracted variable names have the scope of the function, not the global namespace. (This is the appropriate behavior IMO.) If for some reason you want the extracted variables to be visible in the global namespace, you must declare them 'global' inside the function.
[#37] coop at better-mouse-trap dot com [2000-10-09 20:59:37]
If you prefer to use named arguments to your functions (so you don't have to worry about the order of variable argument lists), you can do so PERL style with anonymous arrays:
<?php
function foo($args)
{
print "named_arg1 : " . $args["named_arg1"] . "\n";
print "named_arg2 : " . $args["named_arg2"] . "\n";
}
foo(array("named_arg1" => "arg1_value", "named_arg2" => "arg2_value"));
?>
will output:
named_arg1 : arg1_value
named_arg2 : arg2_value
[#38] almasy at axisdata dot com [2000-08-20 16:11:13]
Re: Passing By Reference Inside A Class
Passing arguments by reference does work inside a class. When you do:
$this->testVar = $ref;
inside setTestVar(), you're copying by value instead of copying by reference. I think what you want there is this:
$this->testVar = &$ref;
Which is the new "assign by reference" syntax that was added in PHP4.