I have a code that looks like this :
$app->add(function($req, $res, $next) {
# closure A
$res->on('end', function($res) use ($req) {
# closure B
});
$next();
});
As you can see, I have a closure in a closure. Closure B is receiving $res
ponse from the event so there's no problem with it. But it is also use
ing $req
uest from closure A.
Here, i have a doubt about the scoping of the use
'd variable, I see two possibilities :
- Any response will have its own request object, because the closure B is re-created for each new listener passed to
$res->on
. So there's many closures B with their own scope inherited once from the used variable of closure A. - Or: any new request will replace
$req
and$res
in closure A (normal behaviour...) BUT will also replace the$req
used by precedently-created closures B. And that would be problematic if a request #1 is not answered before a request #2 arrives (this is asynchronous code based on an event loop).
I hope I'm clear enough. I ask this because, for example, in JavaScript, we sometimes have to use callback generators to ensure that the scope of a sub-closure is not replaced.
Edit: I tried with a code that theoritically does the same thing, but which is easier to test:
$a = function($var) {
return function() use ($var) {
var_dump($var);
};
};
$fn1 = $a((object) ['val' => 1]);
$fn2 = $a((object) ['val' => 2]);
$fn2();
$fn1();
The output (2, 1) showed that the first function $fn1
has kept its original scope. Also, I noticed that the output of var_dump
on a Closure object shows the scope it brings:
object(Closure)#3 (1) {
["static"]=>
array(1) {
["res"]=>
object(stdClass)#2 (1) {
["val"]=>
int(1)
}
}
}
Technical explanation? I think that's because closures in PHP are regular PHP objects where use
is a sort of constructor.
- Closures in the example just above are acting like this: http://pastebin.com/qkQ5GDFw
- But not like this, where I force PHP to keep the same reference, which is not possible with closure's "constructors": http://pastebin.com/ixfVh2Uf
Am I right? Any PHP specialist?