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The purpose of this extension is to allow overloading of object
property access and method calls. Only one function is defined
in this extension, overload() which
takes the name of the class that should have this functionality
enabled. The class named has to define appropriate methods if
it wants to have this functionality: __get()
,
__set()
and __call()
respectively for getting/setting a property, or calling a method.
This way overloading can be selective. Inside these handler
functions the overloading is disabled so you can access object
properties normally.
This extension is EXPERIMENTAL. The behaviour of this extension -- including the names of its functions and anything else documented about this extension -- may change without notice in a future release of PHP. Use this extension at your own risk.
This extension is not a part of PHP 5. PHP 5 supports __get()
, __set()
and
__call()
natively. See the Overloading in PHP 5 page
for more information.
In order to use these functions, you must compile
PHP with the --enable-overload
option.
Starting with PHP 4.3.0 this extension is enabled by default. You can
disable overload support with
--disable--overload
.
The windows version of PHP has built in support for this extension. You do not need to load any additional extension in order to use these functions.
Builtin support for overload is available with PHP 4.3.0.
Some simple examples on using the overload() function:
<?php
class OO {
var $a = 111;
var $elem = array('b' => 9, 'c' => 42);
// Callback method for getting a property
function __get($prop_name, &$prop_value)
{
if (isset($this->elem[$prop_name])) {
$prop_value = $this->elem[$prop_name];
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
}
// Callback method for setting a property
function __set($prop_name, $prop_value)
{
$this->elem[$prop_name] = $prop_value;
return true;
}
}
// Here we overload the OO object
overload('OO');
$o = new OO;
echo "\$o->a: $o->a\n"; // print: $o->a: 111
echo "\$o->b: $o->b\n"; // print: $o->b: 9
echo "\$o->c: $o->c\n"; // print: $o->c: 42
echo "\$o->d: $o->d\n"; // print: $o->d:
// add a new item to the $elem array in OO
$o->x = 56;
// instantiate stdclass (it is built-in in PHP 4)
// $val is not overloaded!
$val = new stdclass;
$val->prop = 555;
// Set "a" to be an array with the $val object in it
// But __set() will put this in the $elem array
$o->a = array($val);
var_dump($o->a[0]->prop);
?>
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