Can anybody show example of using forAll
method of Doctrine\Common\Collections\ArrayCollection?
2 Answers
It's pretty straightforward. The class you linked to implements the forAll
method in a following manner:
foreach ($this->_elements as $key => $element) {
if ( ! $p($key, $element)) {
return false;
}
}
So, based on that you should invoke the forAll
like:
$collection = ... #some data
$collection->forAll(function($key, $item){
// Your logic here, based on $key and $item
});
Hope this help....
EDIT (the example):
- You have an object of entity
Student
, which has aOneToMany
to student's marks. You want to check if student has passed all the subjects he/she elected
$student = .... $allPassed = $student->getMarks()->forAll(function($key, $mark){ return $mark->getValue() != 'F'; });
The $allPassed
will hold TRUE
if all marks were either 'A', 'B', 'C' or 'D'. Even if one of them were F
if will be FALSE
.
-
I can't understand how
$key
and$element
parameters passed to the Closure, but now I understood. Thanks! Jun 11, 2014 at 11:51
I would like to highlight that forAll method exits as soon as the inner function returns a false.
Following the example of Perovic, take for instance that the $student has 10 marks, where only one is an 'F'.
If the 'F' mark is the 10th element of the array, the function
$mark->getValue()
will be invoked 10 times.
On the other hand, if the 'F' mark is the first element of the array, $mark->getValue()
will be invoked only once, since the function immediately returns false, and forAll method stops evaluating.
-
The first sentence should actually be stated as
returns a falsey value
Since it will exit when the value is0, false, null, ""
Actual source can be seen in the accepted answer. Results: 3v4l.org/4g6DJ So in effect the method can be thought of astestAll()
– Will B.Nov 30, 2017 at 14:31