In JavaScript, you can define anonymous functions that are executed immediately:
(function () { /* do something */ })()
Can you do something like that in PHP?
For versions prior to PHP 7, the only way to execute them immediately I can think of is
call_user_func(function() { echo 'executed'; });
With current versions of PHP, you can just do
(function() { echo 'executed'; })();
In PHP 7
is to do the same in javascript
$gen = (function() {
yield 1;
yield 2;
return 3;
})();
foreach ($gen as $val) {
echo $val, PHP_EOL;
}
echo $gen->getReturn(), PHP_EOL;
The output is:
1
2
3
This is the simplest for PHP 7.0 or later.
(function() {echo 'Hi';})();
It means create closure, then call it as function by following "()". Works just like JS thanks to uniform variable evaluation order.
Well of course you can use call_user_func
, but there's still another pretty simple alternative:
<?php
// we simply need to write a simple function called run:
function run($f){
$f();
}
// and then we can use it like this:
run(function(){
echo "do something";
});
?>
run
on your function in some other part of the code because there is no handle to your function existing after the line which immediately executes it.
run()
is to immediately execute the unnamed function passed to it. Same as call_user_func()
, only no parameters are passed.
$f();
) and might be faster if the engine you use does not optimize for the special case where call_user_func
has only one function argument. This is because call_user_func
supports passing multiple parameters and it's first argument supports either a string as an argument or a function. That said, if call_user_func
is much readable, I'd not use run
unless the code is located somewhere at the bottom of the pyramind.
run
and call_user_func
. call_user_func
has an inherent disadvantage when compared to run
because run
does only one thing, whereas call_user_func
supports additional features in addition to doing what run
does. You can try a quick loop test (e.g.) to see which is faster on your engine.
(new ReflectionFunction(function() {
// body function
}))->invoke();
Note, accepted answer is fine but it takes 1.41x as long (41% slower) than declaring a function and calling it in two lines.
[I know it's not really a new answer but I felt it was valuable to add this somewhere for visitors.]
Details:
<?php
# Tags: benchmark, call_user_func, anonymous function
require_once("Benchmark.php");
bench(array(
'test1_anonfunc_call' => function(){
$f = function(){
$x = 123;
};
$f();
},
'test2_anonfunc_call_user_func' => function(){
call_user_func(
function(){
$x = 123;
}
);
}
), 10000);
?>
Results:
$ php test8.php
test1_anonfunc_call took 0.0081379413604736s (1228812.0001172/s)
test2_anonfunc_call_user_func took 0.011472940444946s (871616.13432805/s)
This isn't a direct answer, but a workaround. Using PHP >= 7. Defining an anonymous class with a named method and constructing the class and calling the method right away.
$var = (new class() { // Anonymous class
function cool() { // Named method
return 'neato';
}
})->cool(); // Instantiate the anonymous class and call the named method
echo $var; // Echos neato to console.
(new class(){function __construct(){echo 'neato';}});
to fire up the class.
I tried it out this way, but it's more verbose than the top answer by using any operator (or function) that allows you to define the function first:
$value = $hack == ($hack = function(){
// just a hack way of executing an anonymous function
return array(0, 1, 2, 3);
}) ? $hack() : $hack();
$hack = function(){...}; $hack()
?
Not executed inmediately, but close to ;)
<?php
$var = (function(){ echo 'do something'; });
$var();
?>
call_user_func(function(){/* stuff */})
do?