class something{
public function add_val( $val ){开发者_如何学C
$array = array();
foreach( $val as $value ) {
$array[] = static::$post[${$value}];
}
return $array;
}
pulblic function somethingelse(){
....
....
$optionsArray['value'] = array_map( 'add_val', array_chunk( $drop_val, count( $optionsArray['heading_x'] ) ) );
....
....
}
}
how can i call the add_val method within the other using array_map()??
Use an array that contains the object, and the method name:
$optionsArray['value'] = array_map(array($this, 'add_val'), array_chunk($drop_val, count($optionsArray['heading_x'])));
You do the same for most other functions that take in callbacks as parameters, like array_walk()
, call_user_func()
, call_user_func_array()
, and so on.
How does it work? Well, if you pass an array to the callback parameter, PHP does something similar to this (for array_map()
):
if (is_array($callback)) { // array($this, 'add_val')
if (is_object($callback[0])) {
$object = $callback[0]; // The object ($this)
$method = $callback[1]; // The object method name ('add_val')
foreach ($array as &$v) {
// This is how you call a variable object method in PHP
// You end up doing something like $this->add_val($v);
$v = $object->$method($v);
}
}
}
// ...
return $array;
Here you can see that PHP just loops through your array, calling the method on each value. Nothing complicated to it; again just basic object-oriented code.
This may or may not be how PHP does it internally, but conceptually it's the same.
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