200

How do I check the class of an object within the PHP name spaced environment without specifying the full namespaced class.

For example suppose I had an object library/Entity/Contract/Name.

The following code does not work as get_class returns the full namespaced class.

If(get_class($object) == 'Name') {
... do this ...
}

The namespace magic keyword returns the current namespace, which is no use if the tested object has another namespace.

I could simply specify the full classname with namespaces, but this seems to lock in the structure of the code. Also not of much use if I wanted to change the namespace dynamically.

Can anyone think of an efficient way to do this. I guess one option is regex.

3
  • It seems near pointless because different namespaces could have same class names defined inside them, so how will you handle that? And that is because full qualified class name is returned in your sample
    – Alma Do
    Nov 11, 2013 at 8:30
  • 1
    I'm on a mobile device, so I can't submit a decent answer, but the solution is reflection, specifically ReflectionClass::getShortName - php.net/manual/en/reflectionclass.getshortname.php Nov 11, 2013 at 8:55
  • For people looking for a reason to want this: it might be useful in a helper function in a common base class (i.e. multiple namespaces is never an issue in this situation). Dec 16, 2013 at 9:05

24 Answers 24

243

You can do this with reflection. Specifically, you can use the ReflectionClass::getShortName method, which gets the name of the class without its namespace.

First, you need to build a ReflectionClass instance, and then call the getShortName method of that instance:

$reflect = new ReflectionClass($object);
if ($reflect->getShortName() === 'Name') {
    // do this
}

However, I can't imagine many circumstances where this would be desirable. If you want to require that the object is a member of a certain class, the way to test it is with instanceof. If you want a more flexible way to signal certain constraints, the way to do that is to write an interface and require that the code implement that interface. Again, the correct way to do this is with instanceof. (You can do it with ReflectionClass, but it would have much worse performance.)

17
  • 3
    I had to add a slash in front like this $reflect = new \ReflectionClass($object); Mar 12, 2014 at 1:19
  • 13
    I generally don't like to do a lot of ReflectionClass voodoo in my application because it can lead to unexpected results if mis-used (protected methods becoming public, etc.). You can use simple string replacement on PHP magic constants instead: str_replace(__NAMESPACE__ . '\\', '', __CLASS__);. It's also much faster, performance-wise. Nov 11, 2015 at 23:24
  • 5
    @FranklinPStrube Unless I'm missing something, that gets the short name of the current class, rather than the class of the object. I agree that use of reflection usually means you're Doing It Wrong. Nov 13, 2015 at 18:16
  • 5
    Many people use Reflections for member visibility overrides, which is BAD. Do not do that! But stating that use of Reflections in general is Voodoo and Doing It Wrong gives people the wrong impression. You shouldn't avoid them, you should understand them and know when they are beneficial and at which level of abstraction.
    – Vanja D.
    Apr 19, 2018 at 11:34
  • 3
    @lonesomeday — Suffice it to say that your commentary hit on one of my pet peeves; developers who "moralize" about programming techniques simple because they are unable to imagine appropriate use-cases. To me it speaks more about a lack of vision of the person standing in judgement than it does about inappropriateness of the technique. Hey, but don't worry; the vast majority of developers opine in this manner so it is not like you are unique. Dec 23, 2019 at 4:02
200

(new \ReflectionClass($obj))->getShortName(); is the best solution with regards to performance.

I was curious which of the provided solutions is the fastest, so I've put together a little test.

Results

Reflection: 1.967512512207 s ClassA
Basename:   2.6840535163879 s ClassA
Explode:    2.6507515668869 s ClassA

Code

namespace foo\bar\baz;

class ClassA{
    public function getClassExplode(){
        return explode('\\', static::class)[0];
    }

    public function getClassReflection(){
        return (new \ReflectionClass($this))->getShortName();
    }

    public function getClassBasename(){
        return basename(str_replace('\\', '/', static::class));
    }
}

$a = new ClassA();
$num = 100000;

$rounds = 10;
$res = array(
    "Reflection" => array(),
    "Basename" => array(),
    "Explode" => array(),
);

for($r = 0; $r < $rounds; $r++){

    $start = microtime(true);
    for($i = 0; $i < $num; $i++){
        $a->getClassReflection();
    }
    $end = microtime(true);
    $res["Reflection"][] = ($end-$start);

    $start = microtime(true);
    for($i = 0; $i < $num; $i++){
        $a->getClassBasename();
    }
    $end = microtime(true);
    $res["Basename"][] = ($end-$start);

    $start = microtime(true);
    for($i = 0; $i < $num; $i++){
        $a->getClassExplode();
    }
    $end = microtime(true);
    $res["Explode"][] = ($end-$start);
}

echo "Reflection: ".array_sum($res["Reflection"])/count($res["Reflection"])." s ".$a->getClassReflection()."\n";
echo "Basename: ".array_sum($res["Basename"])/count($res["Basename"])." s ".$a->getClassBasename()."\n";
echo "Explode: ".array_sum($res["Explode"])/count($res["Explode"])." s ".$a->getClassExplode()."\n";

The results actually surprised me. I thought the explode solution would be the fastest way to go...

11
  • 1
    Great answer. I was running the very same code but I got a different result (Macbook Pro i7, 16 GB ram). Reflection:0.382, Basename:0.380, Explode:0.399. I think it depends on your system what is best... Oct 2, 2014 at 9:49
  • 4
    Run PHP 10 000 times with that code and you get a better result. The above might fetch the reflection from some pool, but this is not the usual behaviour of the applications out there. They only need it once or twice.
    – LeMike
    Nov 5, 2014 at 11:21
  • 6
    I wonder does this test hold true when instantiating a ReflectionClass on a more substantial object than the small object of Class A in your test...
    – Joe Green
    Dec 16, 2014 at 14:48
  • 3
    running just one iteration instead of 100000 gives a much different result: Reflection: 1.0967254638672 100000th/s ClassA Basename: 0.81062316894531 100000th/s ClassA Explode: 0.50067901611328 100000th/s ClassA
    – mcmurphy
    Aug 14, 2018 at 21:56
  • 15
    explode('\\', static::class)[0] ? doesn't it returns the first part of the namespace? should return last part, not first
    – 2oppin
    Oct 17, 2019 at 9:46
115

I added substr to the test of https://stackoverflow.com/a/25472778/2386943 and that's the fastet way I could test (CentOS PHP 5.3.3, Ubuntu PHP 5.5.9) both with an i5.

$classNameWithNamespace=get_class($this);
return substr($classNameWithNamespace, strrpos($classNameWithNamespace, '\\')+1);

Results

Reflection: 0.068084406852722 s ClassA
Basename: 0.12301609516144 s ClassA
Explode: 0.14073524475098 s ClassA
Substring: 0.059865570068359 s ClassA 

Code

namespace foo\bar\baz;
class ClassA{
  public function getClassExplode(){
    $c = array_pop(explode('\\', get_class($this)));
    return $c;
  }

  public function getClassReflection(){
    $c = (new \ReflectionClass($this))->getShortName();
    return $c;
  }

  public function getClassBasename(){
    $c = basename(str_replace('\\', '/', get_class($this)));
    return $c;
  }

  public function getClassSubstring(){
    $classNameWithNamespace = get_class($this);
    return substr($classNameWithNamespace, strrpos($classNameWithNamespace, '\\')+1);
  }
}

$a = new ClassA();
$num = 100000;

$rounds = 10;
$res = array(
    "Reflection" => array(),
    "Basename" => array(),
    "Explode" => array(),
    "Substring" => array()
);

for($r = 0; $r < $rounds; $r++){

  $start = microtime(true);
  for($i = 0; $i < $num; $i++){
    $a->getClassReflection();
  }
  $end = microtime(true);
  $res["Reflection"][] = ($end-$start);

  $start = microtime(true);
  for($i = 0; $i < $num; $i++){
    $a->getClassBasename();
  }
  $end = microtime(true);
  $res["Basename"][] = ($end-$start);

  $start = microtime(true);
  for($i = 0; $i < $num; $i++){
    $a->getClassExplode();
  }
  $end = microtime(true);
  $res["Explode"][] = ($end-$start);

  $start = microtime(true);
  for($i = 0; $i < $num; $i++){
    $a->getClassSubstring();
  }
  $end = microtime(true);
  $res["Substring"][] = ($end-$start);
}

echo "Reflection: ".array_sum($res["Reflection"])/count($res["Reflection"])." s ".$a->getClassReflection()."\n";
echo "Basename: ".array_sum($res["Basename"])/count($res["Basename"])." s ".$a->getClassBasename()."\n";
echo "Explode: ".array_sum($res["Explode"])/count($res["Explode"])." s ".$a->getClassExplode()."\n";
echo "Substring: ".array_sum($res["Substring"])/count($res["Substring"])." s ".$a->getClassSubstring()."\n";

==UPDATE==

As mentioned in the comments by @MrBandersnatch there is even a faster way to do this:

return substr(strrchr(get_class($this), '\\'), 1);

Here are the updated test results with "SubstringStrChr" (saves up to about 0.001 s):

Reflection: 0.073065280914307 s ClassA
Basename: 0.12585079669952 s ClassA
Explode: 0.14593172073364 s ClassA
Substring: 0.060415267944336 s ClassA
SubstringStrChr: 0.059880912303925 s ClassA
11
  • 6
    Just because we listing for efficiency I found this to be the fastest, comparison from the test provided in this solution substr(strrchr(get_class($obj), '\\'), 1); Reflection: 0.084223914146423 s ClassA -- Basename: 0.13206427097321 s ClassA -- Explode: 0.15331919193268 s ClassA -- Substring: 0.068068099021912 s ClassA -- Strrchar: 0.06472008228302 s ClassA --
    – ctatro85
    Oct 6, 2015 at 14:55
  • 1
    @MrBandersnatch you are correct. I tested your solution and it saved me about 0.001 s. I updated my answer with yours!
    – MaBi
    Nov 12, 2015 at 21:39
  • 4
    Warning: this code does not work with classes in the global namespace (i.e.: their full name equals their short name)! I advice to test something like: if ($pos = strrchr(static::class, '\\')) { .. } else { ... }. May 31, 2016 at 15:57
  • 4
    To make it work in the global namespace too, simply prepend the classname with a backslash :) - ie: $classNameShort = substr(strrchr('\\' . get_class($this), '\\'), 1);
    – rosell.dk
    Mar 26, 2019 at 8:40
  • 1
    I think it's a micro optimization, but it looks like preg_replace is faster than all 5 of your end results. I've tested with a static string to not measure get_class performance as well, but that way preg_replace takes about 20% off the time of SubstringStrChr as you named it: preg_replace('#^.+\\\\#', '', $fqcn);
    – aross
    Sep 18, 2020 at 7:42
46

Here is a more easier way of doing this if you are using Laravel PHP framework :

<?php

// usage anywhere
// returns HelloWorld
$name = class_basename('Path\To\YourClass\HelloWorld');

// usage inside a class
// returns HelloWorld
$name = class_basename(__CLASS__);


/**
 * Get the class "basename" of the given object / class.
 *
 * @param  string|object  $class
 * @return string
 */
function class_basename($class)
{
    $class = is_object($class) ? get_class($class) : $class;

    return basename(str_replace('\\', '/', $class));
}
4
21

I use this:

basename(str_replace('\\', '/', get_class($object)));
4
  • You can also try: $className = explode('\\', basename(get_class($this))); $className = array_pop($className); to get the plain classname. Or use substr.
    – dompie
    Feb 25, 2014 at 10:24
  • 13
    Works only on Windows On Windows, both slash (/) and backslash () are used as directory separator character. In other environments, it is the forward slash (/) php.net/manual/en/function.basename.php
    – OzzyCzech
    Feb 28, 2014 at 12:06
  • 1
    @OzzyCzech I just ran into this while moving from Windows to Ubuntu.... maddening. Wound up using the solution mentioned in MaBi's update. Dec 14, 2015 at 16:20
  • @OzzyCzech How come works only on Windows? the question was regarding the fully qualified namespace name if I am not wrong also years ago, and namespaces are not OS specific, and always with a backslash like windows directory separator.
    – FantomX1
    May 13, 2020 at 15:09
18

To get the short name as an one-liner (since PHP 5.4):

echo (new ReflectionClass($obj))->getShortName();

It is a clean approach and reasonable fast.

1
  • 1
    I wonder how this compares against a string extraction in benchmarks. It seems like this would be much slower. Aug 24, 2016 at 4:30
15

I found myself in a unique situation where instanceof could not be used (specifically namespaced traits) and I needed the short name in the most efficient way possible so I've done a little benchmark of my own. It includes all the different methods & variations from the answers in this question.

$bench = new \xori\Benchmark(1000, 1000);     # https://github.com/Xorifelse/php-benchmark-closure
$shell = new \my\fancy\namespace\classname(); # Just an empty class named `classname` defined in the `\my\fancy\namespace\` namespace

$bench->register('strrpos', (function(){
    return substr(static::class, strrpos(static::class, '\\') + 1);
})->bindTo($shell));

$bench->register('safe strrpos', (function(){
    return substr(static::class, ($p = strrpos(static::class, '\\')) !== false ? $p + 1 : 0);
})->bindTo($shell));

$bench->register('strrchr', (function(){
    return substr(strrchr(static::class, '\\'), 1);
})->bindTo($shell));

$bench->register('reflection', (function(){
    return (new \ReflectionClass($this))->getShortName();
})->bindTo($shell));

$bench->register('reflection 2', (function($obj){
    return $obj->getShortName();
})->bindTo($shell), new \ReflectionClass($shell));

$bench->register('basename', (function(){
    return basename(str_replace('\\', '/', static::class));
})->bindTo($shell));

$bench->register('explode', (function(){
    $e = explode("\\", static::class);
    return end($e);
})->bindTo($shell));

$bench->register('slice', (function(){
    return join('',array_slice(explode('\\', static::class), -1));
})->bindTo($shell));    

print_r($bench->start());

A list of the of the entire result is here but here are the highlights:

  • If you're going to use reflection anyways, using $obj->getShortName() is the fastest method however; using reflection only to get the short name it is almost the slowest method.
  • 'strrpos' can return a wrong value if the object is not in a namespace so while 'safe strrpos' is a tiny bit slower I would say this is the winner.
  • To make 'basename' compatible between Linux and Windows you need to use str_replace() which makes this method the slowest of them all.

A simplified table of results, speed is measured compared to the slowest method:

+-----------------+--------+
| registered name | speed  |
+-----------------+--------+
| reflection 2    | 70.75% |
| strrpos         | 60.38% |
| safe strrpos    | 57.69% |
| strrchr         | 54.88% |
| explode         | 46.60% |
| slice           | 37.02% |
| reflection      | 16.75% |
| basename        | 0.00%  |
+-----------------+--------+
8

You can use explode for separating the namespace and end to get the class name:

$ex = explode("\\", get_class($object));
$className = end($ex);
0
7

Yii way

\yii\helpers\StringHelper::basename(get_class($model));

Yii uses this method in its Gii code generator

Method documentation

This method is similar to the php function basename() except that it will treat both \ and / as directory separators, independent of the operating system. This method was mainly created to work on php namespaces. When working with real file paths, php's basename() should work fine for you. Note: this method is not aware of the actual filesystem, or path components such as "..".

More information:

https://github.com/yiisoft/yii2/blob/master/framework/helpers/BaseStringHelper.php http://www.yiiframework.com/doc-2.0/yii-helpers-basestringhelper.html#basename()-detail

2
  • Welcome to Stack Overflow. Please provide more information for your answer. What does this do and how can one use it.
    – Jens
    Apr 16, 2017 at 21:53
  • 1
    This worked for me on Windows but not on Linux, maybe because namespaces are in a form of Windows directories backslashes '\' , whereas linux basename considers directory separators forward slashes '/'. So I worked it around with strtr.' basename(strtr($class,'\\','/'))
    – FantomX1
    Dec 6, 2017 at 17:46
6

Here is simple solution for PHP 5.4+

namespace {
    trait Names {
        public static function getNamespace() {
            return implode('\\', array_slice(explode('\\', get_called_class()), 0, -1));
        }

        public static function getBaseClassName() {
            return basename(str_replace('\\', '/', get_called_class()));
        }
    }
}

What will be return?

namespace x\y\z {
    class SomeClass {
        use \Names;
    }

    echo \x\y\z\SomeClass::getNamespace() . PHP_EOL; // x\y\z
    echo \x\y\z\SomeClass::getBaseClassName() . PHP_EOL; // SomeClass
}

Extended class name and namespace works well to:

namespace d\e\f {

    class DifferentClass extends \x\y\z\SomeClass {

    }

    echo \d\e\f\DifferentClass::getNamespace() . PHP_EOL; // d\e\f
    echo \d\e\f\DifferentClass::getBaseClassName() . PHP_EOL; // DifferentClass
}

What about class in global namespace?

namespace {

    class ClassWithoutNamespace {
        use \Names;
    }

    echo ClassWithoutNamespace::getNamespace() . PHP_EOL; // empty string
    echo ClassWithoutNamespace::getBaseClassName() . PHP_EOL; // ClassWithoutNamespace
}
5

I know this is an old post but this is what i use - Faster than all posted above just call this method from your class, a lot quicker than using Reflection

namespace Foo\Bar\Baz;

class Test {
    public function getClass() {
        return str_replace(__NAMESPACE__.'\\', '', static::class);
    }
}
1
  • Unfortunately that only works if you're calling it in the class whose name you want, not on just any class name as a string.
    – jurchiks
    Mar 29, 2020 at 23:47
3

If you need to know the class name that was called from inside a class, and don't want the namespace, you can use this one

$calledClass = get_called_class();
$name = strpos($calledClass, '\\') === false ?
    $calledClass : substr($calledClass, strrpos($calledClass, '\\') + 1);

This is great when you have a method inside a class which is extended by other classes. Furthermore, this also works if namespaces aren't used at all.

Example:

<?php
namespace One\Two {
    class foo
    {
        public function foo()
        {
            $calledClass = get_called_class();
            $name = strpos($calledClass, '\\') === false ?
                $calledClass : substr($calledClass, strrpos($calledClass, '\\') + 1);

            var_dump($name);
        }
    }
}

namespace Three {
    class bar extends \One\Two\foo
    {
        public function bar()
        {
            $this->foo();
        }
    }
}

namespace {
    (new One\Two\foo)->foo();
    (new Three\bar)->bar();
}

// test.php:11:string 'foo' (length=3)
// test.php:11:string 'bar' (length=3)
3

A good old regex seems to be faster than the most of the previous shown methods:

// both of the below calls will output: ShortClassName

echo preg_replace('/.*\\\\/', '', 'ShortClassName');
echo preg_replace('/.*\\\\/', '', 'SomeNamespace\SomePath\ShortClassName');

So this works even when you provide a short class name or a fully qualified (canonical) class name.

What the regex does is that it consumes all previous chars until the last separator is found (which is also consumed). So the remaining string will be the short class name.

If you want to use a different separator (eg. / ) then just use that separator instead. Remember to escape the backslash (ie. \) and also the pattern char (ie. /) in the input pattern.

3

Fastest that I found here for PHP 7.2 on Ububntu 18.04

preg_replace('/^(\w+\\\)*/', '', static::class)
2

You may get an unexpected result when the class doesn't have a namespace. I.e. get_class returns Foo, then $baseClass would be oo.

$baseClass = substr(strrchr(get_class($this), '\\'), 1);

This can easily be fixed by prefixing get_class with a backslash:

$baseClass = substr(strrchr('\\'.get_class($this), '\\'), 1);

Now also classes without a namespace will return the right value.

2

Based on @MaBi 's answer, I made this:

trait ClassShortNameTrait
{
    public static function getClassShortName()
    {
        if ($pos = strrchr(static::class, '\\')) {
            return substr($pos, 1);
        } else {
            return static::class;
        }
    }
}

Which you may use like that:

namespace Foo\Bar\Baz;

class A
{
    use ClassShortNameTrait;
}

A::class returns Foo\Bar\Baz\A, but A::getClassShortName() returns A.

Works for PHP >= 5.5.

2

Here you go:

public function get_name()
{
   return str_replace(__NAMESPACE__ . '\\', '', __CLASS__);
}
1
  • 1
    Careful, this does not work in some situations, such as traits (since __NAMESPACE__ refers to the namespace of the trait, whereas __CLASS__ refers to the final class, possibly in a different namespace). (this also means it could be used to detect such a scenario :D)
    – Christian
    Apr 12, 2023 at 8:58
1

Found on the documentation page of get_class, where it was posted by me at nwhiting dot com.

function get_class_name($object = null)
{
    if (!is_object($object) && !is_string($object)) {
        return false;
    }

    $class = explode('\\', (is_string($object) ? $object : get_class($object)));
    return $class[count($class) - 1];
}

But the idea of namespaces is to structure your code. That also means that you can have classes with the same name in multiple namespaces. So theoretically, the object you pass could have the name (stripped) class name, while still being a totally different object than you expect.

Besides that, you might want to check for a specific base class, in which case get_class doesn't do the trick at all. You might want to check out the operator instanceof.

0

Quoting php.net:

On Windows, both slash (/) and backslash () are used as directory separator character. In other environments, it is the forward slash (/).

Based on this info and expanding from arzzzen answer this should work on both Windows and Nix* systems:

<?php

if (basename(str_replace('\\', '/', get_class($object))) == 'Name') {
    // ... do this ...
}

Note: I did a benchmark of ReflectionClass against basename+str_replace+get_class and using reflection is roughly 20% faster than using the basename approach, but YMMV.

0

The fastest and imho easiest solution that works in any environment is:

<?php

namespace \My\Awesome\Namespace;

class Foo {

  private $shortName;

  public function fastShortName() {
    if ($this->shortName === null) {
      $this->shortName = explode("\\", static::class);
      $this->shortName = end($this->shortName);
    }
    return $this->shortName;
  }

  public function shortName() {
    return basename(strtr(static::class, "\\", "/"));
  }

}

echo (new Foo())->shortName(); // "Foo"

?>
2
  • 1
    This is why I wish PHP had internal class information operators. Instantiating an external reflector to do what should be as simple as $Object->__class->getShortName() really pisses me off about PHP. Your approach works, but now you're putting concrete methods in your classes just to expose what should be a language construct. Apr 14, 2014 at 15:31
  • PHP without “concrete” (or should we call them procedural) functions is impossible. Let's wait for PHP 6 (well, if it ever comes). Apr 14, 2014 at 16:33
0
$shortClassName = join('',array_slice(explode('\\', $longClassName), -1));
0

If you're just stripping name spaces and want anything after the last \ in a class name with namespace (or just the name if there's no '\') you can do something like this:

$base_class = preg_replace('/^([\w\\\\]+\\\\)?([^\\\\]+)$/', '$2', get_class($myobject));

Basically it's regex to get any combination of characters or backslashes up and until the last backslash then to return only the non-backslash characters up and until the end of the string. Adding the ? after the first grouping means if the pattern match doesn't exist, it just returns the full string.

0

Because "ReflectionClass" can be version depend just use the follow:

if(class_basename(get_class($object)) == 'Name') {
... do this ...
}

or even clear

if(class_basename(ClassName::class) == 'ClassName') {
... do this ...
}
1
  • 3
    class_basename is not standard php function, you need to install laravel (illuminate/helpers) to use it. Such solution is too heavy due to additional package requirements.
    – FallDi
    Oct 5, 2020 at 5:49
0

Just my small function which from all benchmarks runs fastest on my mac with PHP 8.1.6. This function handles situations when provided string is empty or doesn't have any namespace (doesn't contain \ character inside).

<?php

declare(strict_types=1);

use function strrpos;
use function substr;

class Utils {
    /** @param class-string $class */
    public static function classShortName(string $class): string
    {
        $pos = strrpos($class, '\\');

        if ($pos === false) {
            return $class;
        }

        return substr($class, $pos + 1);
    }
}

Benchmark (class without namespace or \):

Reflection: 0.0082374811172485 s ClassA
Basename: 0.0071691036224365 s ClassA
Explode: 0.0077154636383057 s ClassA
Substring: 0.0076151371002197 s lassA // Doesn't work correctly
PregReplace: 0.0064111948013306 s lassA // Doesn't work correctly
Utils::classShortName: 0.0043857336044312 s ClassA

Benchmark (full namespace):

Reflection: 0.0093500852584839 s ClassA
Basename: 0.012896633148193 s ClassA
Explode: 0.013392925262451 s ClassA
Substring: 0.0083461999893188 s ClassA // almost same function runs slower ?!
PregReplace: 0.011274862289429 s ClassA
Utils::classShortName: 0.0075617074966431 s ClassA
1
  • How about strrchr? I know it sadly doesn't support the 3rd argument like strchr does, but seems to me like it would be best for the job.
    – Terax
    Sep 22, 2022 at 17:21

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