82

Is it possible to do something like this?

public function something() {
    $thisMethodName = method_get_name(); 
}

Where method_get_name() returns the name of the method itself.

8 Answers 8

140

Sure, you want the magic constants.

function myFunction() { print __FUNCTION__." in ".__FILE__." at ".__LINE__."\n"; }

Find out more from the php manual

2
  • 45
    and just to be cheeky, the magic constant for method name is: __METHOD__
    – Anthony
    Sep 15, 2009 at 2:43
  • 46
    Late to the game, but I was surprised to find that __METHOD__ actually returns Class::method so __FUNCTION__ specifically returns just the method name... for anyone else who still doesn't RTFM like me.
    – Chords
    Nov 12, 2013 at 22:19
28

While you can use the magic constant __METHOD__ I would highly recommend checking out PHP's reflection. This is supported in PHP5.

$modelReflector = new ReflectionClass(__CLASS__);
$method = $modelReflector->getMethod(__METHOD__);

You can then do kick-ass stuff like inspect the signature, etc.

3
14

As smartj suggested you can try the magic constant __METHOD__, but remember that this will return a string containing also your class name, i.e. 'MyClass::something'. Using __FUNCTION__ instead will return 'something'.

4

With __FUNCTION__ i can use this:

protected static function getUserResponseByAccessTokenRequestOptions(string $myParam): array
{
    return array_merge(parent::{__FUNCTION__}($myParam), [
        'myValue' => '123'
    ]);
}

instead of this:

protected static function getUserResponseByAccessTokenRequestOptions(string $myParam): array
{
    return array_merge(parent::getUserResponseByAccessTokenRequestOptions($myParam), [
        'myValue' => '123'
    ]);
}

And does not care about replacing the name of the method inside method if I want to change it.

1
  • This is a great reference, also works for cases like self::{self::$some_method_name}(); :-) where is the documentation for it? (I know I've seen it somewhere over the years, just can't remember the exact name for it) (Generally I know it's a combination of Variable functions and Variable variables )
    – jave.web
    Feb 25, 2021 at 1:12
3

Using __FUNCTION__ is the way to go instead of:

 public function something() {
     $thisMethodName = "something";
 }

which is flawed in several ways adding a variable and memory to store the method name as a string and duplicating what already exists, thus unnecessarily adding resources used, (if you do this for a large library with many methods, it matters greatly).

Magic constants in PHP are guaranteed not to change, while this approach would require applicable editing if the method name were changed, thus introducing the potential for an inconsistency (note, I did say potentially, meaning simply it is an otherwise unnecessary edit if the magic constant were used instead).

The time and effort to name a variable, re-type the method name as a string assigned to that unnecessary variable and of course properly referencing the variable name, which is the motivation for PHP supplying magic constants to begin with (and refuting any claim __FUNCTION__ is unnecessary).

3

Perhaps missing late bindings in this way.

when class B extend class A:

__METHOD__ always return the "className::" part referred to A (A::methodName)

Solution is:

static::class."::".__FUNCTION__

In this way you obtain the class reference to current working class (B::methodName)

1

Hackish, but you could also probably dig it out of the debug_backtrace() return value.

1
  • This might be the way to go if you have a common logging function that needs the name of the function that called it.
    – user9645
    Jan 28, 2019 at 12:46
-7

Why can't you do this?

public function something() {
    $thisMethodName = "something";
}
3
  • 8
    Completely unnecessary when __FUNCTION__ is available. Sep 15, 2009 at 2:50
  • 1
    Fair enough - but in the same spirit I could content that `__FUNCTION__ is unnecessary :) Sep 15, 2009 at 2:53
  • 6
    Dangerous if the method receive a new name, the dev can forget to update the var content Apr 15, 2014 at 14:36

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