Is it possible to check and see if an object has already been instantiated with php? I have a mysql class that other pages instantiate to use its methods and what i did was make a log that logs all queries. I noticed that mysql is opened 3-4 times at a time rather than one. So i need to verify if the object is instantiated and if not it wont create another one and open another useless connection.
4 Answers
Sounds like a perfect case for the Singleton pattern.
class Connection
{
/**
* @var Connection
*/
private static $instance;
private static $config = array();
private function __construct()
{
// whatever you need in here, just keep the method private
}
public function __clone()
{
throw new RuntimeException;
}
public function __wakeup()
{
throw new RuntimeException;
}
public static setConfig(array $config)
{
self::$config = $config;
}
public static function getInstance()
{
if (null === self::$instance) {
self::$instance = new self();
}
return self::$instance;
}
}
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Ha, and you still lost to me :P But you got the upvote because I was to lazy to copy it from the manual. If you link to the relevant portion of the manual I'll delete mine & upvote yours.– WrikkenAug 2, 2011 at 1:09
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@Wrikken Copying it from the manual would have saved me time, I typed my answer. Also, I like
new self()
better than grabbing the class name from__CLASS__
– PhilAug 2, 2011 at 1:14 -
no, don't make it private: that will only result in a Warning, and still a usable class.... Exceptions must be thrown or fatal errors triggered.– WrikkenAug 2, 2011 at 1:14
You can use the instanceof operator to check if a given variable is of a specific class:
if ($db instanceof DatabaseClass) :
Read more about it here: http://php.net/instanceof
Simply use is_object
, as an a class has no type but just has memory allocation, so using is_object
on a class name will only return a string, when you instantiate an object by using the new keyword, and object is created in the memory and has it's objective type.
Test Case:
class HelloWorld{}
$a = is_object(HelloWorld);
$b = is_object(new HelloWorld);
var_dump($a, $b);
Results:
bool(false) bool(true)
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This does not work for me. Without the 'new', php assumes its a constant. You have to create an object of that class and pass the object variable to the is_object function.– M HAug 30, 2015 at 7:11