Some good solutions on here!
Here's my version.
- It's strongly typed
- It works with IDE auto-completion
- Enums are defined by a code and a description, where the code can be an integer, a binary value, a short string, or basically anything else you want. The pattern could easily be extended to support orther properties.
- It asupports value (==) and reference (===) comparisons and works in switch statements.
I think the main disadvantage is that enum members do have to be separately declared and instantiated, due to the descriptions and PHP's inability to construct objects at static member declaration time. I guess a way round this might be to use reflection with parsed doc comments instead.
The abstract enum looks like this:
<?php
abstract class AbstractEnum
{
/** @var array cache of all enum instances by class name and integer value */
private static $allEnumMembers = array();
/** @var mixed */
private $code;
/** @var string */
private $description;
/**
* Return an enum instance of the concrete type on which this static method is called, assuming an instance
* exists for the passed in value. Otherwise an exception is thrown.
*
* @param $code
* @return AbstractEnum
* @throws Exception
*/
public static function getByCode($code)
{
$concreteMembers = &self::getConcreteMembers();
if (array_key_exists($code, $concreteMembers)) {
return $concreteMembers[$code];
}
throw new Exception("Value '$code' does not exist for enum '".get_called_class()."'");
}
public static function getAllMembers()
{
return self::getConcreteMembers();
}
/**
* Create, cache and return an instance of the concrete enum type for the supplied primitive value.
*
* @param mixed $code code to uniquely identify this enum
* @param string $description
* @throws Exception
* @return AbstractEnum
*/
protected static function enum($code, $description)
{
$concreteMembers = &self::getConcreteMembers();
if (array_key_exists($code, $concreteMembers)) {
throw new Exception("Value '$code' has already been added to enum '".get_called_class()."'");
}
$concreteMembers[$code] = $concreteEnumInstance = new static($code, $description);
return $concreteEnumInstance;
}
/**
* @return AbstractEnum[]
*/
private static function &getConcreteMembers() {
$thisClassName = get_called_class();
if (!array_key_exists($thisClassName, self::$allEnumMembers)) {
$concreteMembers = array();
self::$allEnumMembers[$thisClassName] = $concreteMembers;
}
return self::$allEnumMembers[$thisClassName];
}
private function __construct($code, $description)
{
$this->code = $code;
$this->description = $description;
}
public function getCode()
{
return $this->code;
}
public function getDescription()
{
return $this->description;
}
}
Here's an example concrete enum:
<?php
require('AbstractEnum.php');
class EMyEnum extends AbstractEnum
{
/** @var EMyEnum */
public static $MY_FIRST_VALUE;
/** @var EMyEnum */
public static $MY_SECOND_VALUE;
/** @var EMyEnum */
public static $MY_THIRD_VALUE;
public static function _init()
{
self::$MY_FIRST_VALUE = self::enum(1, 'My first value');
self::$MY_SECOND_VALUE = self::enum(2, 'My second value');
self::$MY_THIRD_VALUE = self::enum(3, 'My third value');
}
}
EMyEnum::_init();
Which can be used like this:
<?php
require('EMyEnum.php');
echo EMyEnum::$MY_FIRST_VALUE->getCode().' : '.EMyEnum::$MY_FIRST_VALUE->getDescription().PHP_EOL.PHP_EOL;
var_dump(EMyEnum::getAllMembers());
echo PHP_EOL.EMyEnum::getByCode(2)->getDescription().PHP_EOL;
And produces this output:
1 : My first value
array(3) {
[1]=>
object(EMyEnum)#1 (2) {
["code":"AbstractEnum":private]=>
int(1)
["description":"AbstractEnum":private]=>
string(14) "My first value"
}
[2]=>
object(EMyEnum)#2 (2) {
["code":"AbstractEnum":private]=>
int(2)
["description":"AbstractEnum":private]=>
string(15) "My second value"
}
[3]=>
object(EMyEnum)#3 (2) {
["code":"AbstractEnum":private]=>
int(3)
["description":"AbstractEnum":private]=>
string(14) "My third value"
}
}
My second value