I'm just starting to learn about OOP and am converting a small existing site in the process. I have a large global array ($countries) where I store the country code, name in two different languages, and international calling code for about 240 countries. I want to create a class (Country) with methods which would look up values from $countries. Do I need to store the array inside the class, or can I store it in a separate file? If I can put it in a separate file, how would I access it in my methods?
2 Answers
You should definitely store the list of countries outside of your class code to avoid source code changes every time you need to update a list. Depends on your use-case it could be a file or a database table.
Your look-up class should get information where to load data from while it is constructed.
Something like this:
class CountryProvider {
protected $countries = [];
public function __construct($dataFile)
{
$this->loadDataFromFile($dataFile);
}
protected function loadDataFromFile($dataFile)
{
// load your file here into $countries property
}
public function findCountryByCode($code)
{
// do your lookup here
}
}
$countryProvider = new CountryProvider('/path/to/your/file');
$country = $countryProvider->findCountryByCode('SOME_COUNTRY_CODE');
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This is my first class, so I'm not sure what you mean. How would I do that?– gr8daneNov 8, 2014 at 22:02
Yes, return the array from that file, and then use it like:
$array = include('file.php')
http://php.net/manual/en/function.include.php
file.php
<?php
return array(
'name' => 'Josh Smith'
);
index.php
<?php
$arr = include('file.php');
var_dump($arr);
Class Whatever
class Whatever {
public function getCountries() {
$arr = include('file.php');
return $arr;
}
}
$what = new Whatever();
$c = $what->getCountries();
var_dump($c);
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You can do that where ever you want the array. Probably, if you are using OOP, you would have a method that would perform such functionality, and you can ->getCountries() with relative ease from your object instance. Nov 8, 2014 at 21:55
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Yes, this separation of concerns will mean if your code changes in the future, you wouldn't have to change file names in multiple places. You amend that particular function. I think, at first, try out my method in the answer, and then turn it OOP later. Nov 8, 2014 at 22:02
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Yes, that is how I'm currently doing it. The point is I'm trying to convert it to OOP. This is my first class, so I wasn't sure if I could include files inside classes and/or methods.– gr8daneNov 8, 2014 at 22:07