The PHP manual for anonymous functions (ie, Closures) states that:
Anonymous functions are currently implemented using the Closure class. This is an implementation detail and should not be relied upon.
(Emphasis is my own)
Is it possible to test a variable, such that the test returns true only if the variable is a Closure, without referring to the Closure class?
In other words, how can I rewrite the following such that it will raise an error when $bar
is anything but an anonymous function:
function foo(Closure $bar) { $bar(); }
EDIT: Based on the answers received, here is an example test.
Notes:
- It seems there is no way to differentiate between Functors and Closures, and that the test is probably just as 'implementation specific' as using the Closure class.
- The (seemingly obvious)
ReflectionFunction::isClosure()
method seems to be be almost useless: by the time you've done the checks required to make sure that ReflectionFunction can actually be instantiated (can't take a Class except for a Closure), you've eliminated all other options. - In 5.3.0 you ReflectionClass($closure)->hasMethod('__invoke') returned false, so this could be used as a test against Functors, however (I'm told) this has changed since. This highlights the frailty of the solution too.
- Follow up from Gordon - As of PHP 5.4 you can rely on Closure being a Closure: php.net/manual/en/class.closure.php
Code:
/**
* Return true if and only if the passed argument is a Closure.
*/
function testClosure($a) {
// Must be Callback, Labmda, Functor or Closure:
if(!is_callable($a)) return false;
// Elminate Callbacks & Lambdas
if(!is_object($a)) return false;
// Eliminate Functors
//$r = new ReflectionFunction($a); <-- fails if $a is a Functor
//if($r->isClosure()) return true;
return false;
}
Test case:
//////////// TEST CASE /////////////
class CallBackClass {
function callBackFunc() {
}
}
class Functor {
function __invoke() {
}
}
$functor = new Functor();
$lambda = create_function('', '');
$callback = array('CallBackClass', 'callBackFunc');
$array = array();
$object = new stdClass();
$closure = function() { ; };
echo "Is it a closure? \n";
echo "Closure: " . (testClosure($closure) ? "yes" : "no") . "\n";
echo "Null: " . (testClosure(null) ? "yes" : "no") . "\n";
echo "Array: " . (testClosure($array) ? "yes" : "no") . "\n";
echo "Callback: " . (testClosure($callback) ? "yes" : "no") . "\n";
echo "Labmda: " .(testClosure($lambda) ? "yes" : "no") . "\n";
echo "Invoked Class: " . (testClosure($functor) ? "yes" : "no") . "\n";
echo "StdObj: " . (testClosure($object) ? "yes" : "no") . "\n";
-
create_function
, the poor man's anonymous functions from before PHP 5.3? What about objects that can be__invoke()
d?is_callable()
, then why isn't that enough???