vote up 2 vote down star

Hi Guys,

I have this:

  • one string variable which holds the class name ($classname)
  • one string variable with holds the property name ($propertyname)

I want to get that property from that class, the problem is, the property is static and I don't know how to do that.

If the property weren't static, it would have been:

$classname->$propertyname;

if the property were a method, I could have used call_user_function

call_user_func(array($classname, $propertyname));

But in my case, am I just lost. I am however hoping that it is possible. With the thousands of functions that PHP has, he'd better have something for this as well. Maybe I'm missing something?

Thanks!

Edit:

  • for those with eval() solutions: thanks, but it is out of the question
  • for those with get _class _vars() solutions: thanks, but it seems it returns "the default properties of the given class" (php.net), and yes, I would like that value to be changable (even though it does help me in some of the cases)
flag

80% accept rate

5 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

If you are using PHP 5.3.0 or greater, you can use the following:

$classname::$$propertyname;

Unfortunately, if you are using a version lower than 5.3.0, you are stuck using eval() (get_class_vars() will not work if the value is dynamic).

$value = eval($classname.'::$'.$propertyname.';');


EDIT: I've just said get_class_vars() wouldn't work if the value is dynamic, but apparently, variable static members are part of "the default properties of a class". You could use the following wrapper:

function get_user_prop($className, $property) {
  if(!class_exists($className)) return null;
  if(!property_exists($className, $property)) return null;

  $vars = get_class_vars($className);
  return $vars[$property];
}

class Foo { static $bar = 'Fizz'; }

echo get_user_prop('Foo', 'bar'); // echoes Fizz
Foo::$bar = 'Buzz';
echo get_user_prop('Foo', 'bar'); // echoes Buzz

Unfortunately, if you want to set the value of the variable, you will still need to use eval(), but with some validation in place, it's not so evil.

function set_user_prop($className, $property,$value) {
  if(!class_exists($className)) return false;
  if(!property_exists($className, $property)) return false;

  /* Since I cannot trust the value of $value
   * I am putting it in single quotes (I don't
   * want its value to be evaled. Now it will
   * just be parsed as a variable reference).
   */
  eval($className.'::$'.$property.'=$value;');
  return true;
}

class Foo { static $bar = 'Fizz'; }

echo get_user_prop('Foo', 'bar'); // echoes Fizz
set_user_prop('Foo', 'bar', 'Buzz');
echo get_user_prop('Foo', 'bar'); // echoes Buzz

set_user_prop() with this validation should be secure. If people start putting random things as $className and $property, it will exit out of the function as it won't be an existing class or property. As of $value, it is never actually parsed as code so whatever they put in there won't affect the script.

link|flag
+1 for wrapper function. – nilamo Aug 14 at 17:46
Oh my god, I was just about to ask "but how about setting...". Dude, you totally rock! – skidding Aug 14 at 18:01
vote up 0 vote down

get_class_vars is not same as get_object_vars i think get_clas_vars should return the original property values

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Potentially relevant: discussion on late static binding in PHP - http://stackoverflow.com/questions/87192/when-would-you-need-to-use-late-static-binding.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

'eval' looks so close to 'evil', and I hate using it and/or seeing it in code. With a few ideas from other answers, here's a way to avoid it even if your php isn't 5.3 or higher.

Changed to reflect testing based on a comment.

class A {
    static $foo = 'bar';
}

A::$foo = 'baz';
$a = new A;

$class = get_class($a);
$vars = get_class_vars($class);

echo $vars['foo'];

Outputs 'baz'.

link|flag
get_class_vars() only returns the initial value of $foo. If $foo changes, the value you will get from get_class_vars() will not change. – Andrew Moore Aug 14 at 17:38
Actually, by definition it's not supposed to work, but apparently does. – Andrew Moore Aug 14 at 17:41
I agree with your second comment. I thought that was a little weird, so I tested it and updated my answer. Does that match what you found? – nilamo Aug 14 at 17:43
Actually, get_class_vars('A') just works fine. You don't need to create an instance. – Andrew Moore Aug 14 at 17:45
Sweet. *<|:^) <-- meeting minimum char limit with Santa. – nilamo Aug 14 at 17:47
vote up 2 vote down

You should be able to do something like:

eval("echo $classname::$propertyname;");

I just did a quick test and got this to work for me. Not sure if there's a better way or not, but I wasn't able to find one.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.