38

In the following code I call a class with call_user_func().

if(file_exists('controller/' . $this->controller . '.controller.php')) {
    require('controller/' . $this->controller . '.controller.php');
    call_user_func(array($this->controller, $this->view));
} else {
    echo 'error: controller not exists <br/>'. 'controller/' . $this->controller . '.controller.php';
}

Let’s say that the controller has the following code.

class test {

    static function test_function() {
        echo 'test';
    }

}

When I call call_user_func('test', 'test_function') there isn't any problem. But when I call a function that does not exist, it does not work. Now I want to check first if the function in the class test does exist, before I call the function call_user_func.

Is there a function that checks if a function exists in an class or is there another way I can check this?

3
  • 7
    method_exists()
    – Mark Baker
    Oct 23, 2013 at 9:05
  • 3
    Not every existing method is callable -> is_callable
    – a4c8b
    Oct 23, 2013 at 9:11
  • Not every callable method can really be called. E.g. calling not-static method statically.
    – Finesse
    Jun 27, 2018 at 2:08

4 Answers 4

68

You're looking for method_exists for starters. But what you should check, too is whether or not the method is callable. This is done by the helpfully named is_callable function:

if (method_exists($this->controller, $this->view)
    && is_callable(array($this->controller, $this->view)))
{
    call_user_func(
        array($this->controller, $this->view)
    );
}

But that's just the start of things. Your snippet contains explicit require calls, which suggests you're not using an autoloader.
What's more: all you're doing is check file_exists, not if the class was already loaded. Your code, then, will generate a fatal error if, per chance your snippet gets executed twice with the same values for $this->controller.
Begin fixing this by, in the very least, changing your require to require_once...

3
  • 1
    Do you need to call method_exists() if you are calling is_callable() anyway?
    – MrWhite
    Apr 2, 2015 at 0:13
  • 2
    @w3d: is_callable could, theoretically return true even if you're not calling a method (closures assigned to properties). doing both checks is perhaps a tad paranoid, but it's the safest way. Besides, last I checked, method_exists performed better, so if that returns false, is_callable will not be called (micro-optimization, I know, but still...). That's not to say that you don't have a point, though, but I figure both functions are worth mentioning in this context... Apr 2, 2015 at 7:08
  • Both is_callable and method_exists return true when you check a not-static method with a class name, e.g. class Controller { public function view() {} } is_callable(['Controller', 'view']);.
    – Finesse
    Jun 27, 2018 at 2:05
16

You can use the PHP function method_exists():

if (method_exists('ClassName', 'method_name'))
call_user_func(etc...);

or also:

if (method_exists($class_instance, 'method_name'))
call_user_func(etc...);
1
  • Great It you made it to understand very simple.
    – Ajay Kumar
    Aug 9, 2016 at 19:54
4

From PHP 5.3, you can also use:

if(method_exists($this, $model))
    return forward_static_call([$this, $model], $extra, $parameter);
0

Use method_exists($this->controller, $this->view). For your example:

if(file_exists('controller/' . $this->controller . '.controller.php') && 
   method_exists($this->controller,$this->view)) {

    require('controller/' . $this->controller . '.controller.php');
    call_user_func(array($this->controller, $this->view));

} else {
    echo 'error: controller or function not exists <br/>'. 'controller/' . $this->controller . '.controller.php';
}
1
  • 1
    Although you'd need to call method_exists() after you've included the class file.
    – MrWhite
    Apr 2, 2015 at 0:12

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