By making var
an object of another class, you can chain the method calls to one another.
<?php
class Foo {
public $bar;
public function __construct(Bar $bar) {
$this->bar= $bar;
}
}
class Bar {
private $name;
public function __construct($name) {
$this->name = $name;
}
public function printName() {
echo $this->name;
}
}
$bar = new Bar('Bar');
$bar2 = new Bar('Bar2');
$foo = new Foo($bar);
$foo->bar->printName(); // Will print 'Bar';
$bar2->printName(); // Will print 'Bar2'
You can use this for neat things like Dependency Injection
Also, it may make your code bette readable and understandable because you don't have to buffer variables before making calls to their methods and can just call one method after the other.
Look at this example:
$obj = new MyObject();
$db = $obj->getDb();
$con = $db->getCon();
$stat = $con->getStat();
Which could be written like this using method chaining:
$obj = new Object();
$stat = $obj->getDB()->getCon()->getStat();
But, this is also harder to debug because if any of these methods throw an exception, you will just get the line number where the chain is, which can be quite a hazzle.
So, there are always two sides. It's just another style of programming.
Just be sure not to chain too long in a single line, as you will definitely lose overview.
BAD
$obj->meth('1', $arg2, array('arg2'))->method2($whaterver, array('text' => $bla_text))->andSoOn();
GOOD
$obj->meth('1', $arg2, array('arg2'))
->method2($whaterver, array('text' => $bla_text))
->andSoOn();
$obj->var->method()
is not useful at all due to the meaningless example.var
would have to be an object with a method() method. What you are likely looking for is stackoverflow.com/search?q=method+chaining+php