I have a lot of functions that either have type hinting for arrays or use is_array()
to check the array-ness of a variable.
Now I'm starting to use objects that are iterable. They implement Iterator
or IteratorAggregate
. Will these be accepted as ar开发者_Python百科rays if they pass through type hinting, or undergo is_array()
?
If I have to modify my code, is there a generic sort of is_iterable()
, or must I do something like:
if ( is_array($var) OR $var instance_of Iterable OR $var instanceof IteratorAggregate ) { ... }
What other iterable interfaces are out there?
I think you mean instanceof Iterator
, PHP doesn't have an Iterable
interface. It does have a Traversable
interface though. Iterator
and IteratorAggregate
both extend Traversable
(and AFAIK they are the only ones to do so).
But no, objects implementing Traversable
won't pass the is_array()
check, nor there is a built-in is_iterable()
function. A check you could use is
function is_iterable($var) {
return (is_array($var) || $var instanceof Traversable);
}
To be clear, all php objects can be iterated with foreach, but only some of them implement Traversable
. The presented is_iterable
function will therefore not detect all things that foreach can handle.
PHP 7.1.0 has introduced the iterable
pseudo-type and the is_iterable()
function, which is specially designed for such a purpose:
This […] proposes a new
iterable
pseudo-type. This type is analogous tocallable
, accepting multiple types instead of one single type.
iterable
accepts anyarray
or object implementingTraversable
. Both of these types are iterable usingforeach
and can be used withyield
from within a generator.
function foo(iterable $iterable) {
foreach ($iterable as $value) {
// ...
}
}
This […] also adds a function
is_iterable()
that returns a boolean:true
if a value is iterable and will be accepted by theiterable
pseudo-type,false
for other values.
var_dump(is_iterable([1, 2, 3])); // bool(true)
var_dump(is_iterable(new ArrayIterator([1, 2, 3]))); // bool(true)
var_dump(is_iterable((function () { yield 1; })())); // bool(true)
var_dump(is_iterable(1)); // bool(false)
var_dump(is_iterable(new stdClass())); // bool(false)
I actually had to add a check for stdClass, as instances of stdClass do work in foreach loops, but stdClass does not implement Traversable:
function is_iterable($var) {
return (is_array($var) || $var instanceof Traversable || $var instanceof stdClass);
}
I use a simple (and maybe a little hackish) way to test for "iterability".
function is_iterable($var) {
set_error_handler(function ($errno, $errstr, $errfile, $errline, array $errcontext)
{
throw new \ErrorException($errstr, null, $errno, $errfile, $errline);
});
try {
foreach ($var as $v) {
break;
}
} catch (\ErrorException $e) {
restore_error_handler();
return false;
}
restore_error_handler();
return true;
}
When you try to loop a non iterable variable, PHP throws a warning. By setting a custom error handler prior the attempt to iterate, you can transform an error into an exception thus enabling you to use a try/catch block. Afterwards you restore the previous error handler to not disrupt the program flow.
Here's a small test case (tested in PHP 5.3.15):
class Foo {
public $a = 'one';
public $b = 'two';
}
$foo = new Foo();
$bar = array('d','e','f');
$baz = 'string';
$bazinga = 1;
$boo = new StdClass();
var_dump(is_iterable($foo)); //boolean true
var_dump(is_iterable($bar)); //boolean true
var_dump(is_iterable($baz)); //boolean false
var_dump(is_iterable($bazinga)); //bolean false
var_dump(is_iterable($boo)); //bolean true
Unfortunately you won't be able to use type hints for this and will have to do the is_array($var) or $var instanceof ArrayAccess
stuff. This is a known issue but afaik it is still not resolved. At least it doesn't work with PHP 5.3.2 which I just tested.
You CAN use type hinting if you switch to using iterable objects.
protected function doSomethingWithIterableObject(Iterator $iterableObject) {}
or
protected function doSomethingWithIterableObject(Traversable $iterableObject) {}
However, this can not be used to accept iterable objects and arrays at the same time. If you really want to do that could try building a wrapper function something like this:
// generic function (use name of original function) for old code
// (new code may call the appropriate function directly)
public function doSomethingIterable($iterable)
{
if (is_array($iterable)) {
return $this->doSomethingIterableWithArray($iterable);
}
if ($iterable instanceof Traversable) {
return $this->doSomethingIterableWithObject($iterable);
}
return null;
}
public function doSomethingIterableWithArray(array $iterable)
{
return $this->myIterableFunction($iterable);
}
public function doSomethingIterableWithObject(Iterator $iterable)
{
return $this->myIterableFunction($iterable);
}
protected function myIterableFunction($iterable)
{
// no type checking here
$result = null;
foreach ($iterable as $item)
{
// do stuff
}
return $result;
}
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