How are callbacks written in PHP?
9 Answers
The manual uses the terms "callback" and "callable" interchangeably, however, "callback" traditionally refers to a string or array value that acts like a function pointer, referencing a function or class method for future invocation. This has allowed some elements of functional programming since PHP 4. The flavors are:
$cb1 = 'someGlobalFunction';
$cb2 = ['ClassName', 'someStaticMethod'];
$cb3 = [$object, 'somePublicMethod'];
// this syntax is callable since PHP 5.2.3 but a string containing it
// cannot be called directly
$cb2 = 'ClassName::someStaticMethod';
$cb2(); // fatal error
// legacy syntax for PHP 4
$cb3 = array(&$object, 'somePublicMethod');
This is a safe way to use callable values in general:
if (is_callable($cb2)) {
// Autoloading will be invoked to load the class "ClassName" if it's not
// yet defined, and PHP will check that the class has a method
// "someStaticMethod". Note that is_callable() will NOT verify that the
// method can safely be executed in static context.
$returnValue = call_user_func($cb2, $arg1, $arg2);
}
Modern PHP versions allow the first three formats above to be invoked directly as $cb()
. call_user_func
and call_user_func_array
support all the above.
See: http://php.net/manual/en/language.types.callable.php
Notes/Caveats:
- If the function/class is namespaced, the string must contain the fully-qualified name. E.g.
['Vendor\Package\Foo', 'method']
call_user_func
does not support passing non-objects by reference, so you can either usecall_user_func_array
or, in later PHP versions, save the callback to a var and use the direct syntax:$cb()
;- Objects with an
__invoke()
method (including anonymous functions) fall under the category "callable" and can be used the same way, but I personally don't associate these with the legacy "callback" term. - The legacy
create_function()
creates a global function and returns its name. It's a wrapper foreval()
and anonymous functions should be used instead.
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Indeed, using the function is the proper way to do it. While using a variable and then just calling it, as suggested in the accepted answer is cool, it's ugly and won't scale well with code.– iccoAug 30, 2009 at 20:44
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4Changed accepted answer. Agreed with comments, this is a great answer. Oct 5, 2009 at 23:33
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It would be helpful to readers coming from Python programming to point out in the answer that
'someGlobalFunction'
indeed is a defined function.– TMOTTMApr 2, 2013 at 13:45 -
1As of PHP 5.3, there are closures, see Bart van Heukelom's answer. It's much simpler and "standard" than all this legacy mess. Apr 24, 2015 at 15:53
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Yes, I mention anonymous functions in my answer, but the OP asked for "callback" (in 2008) and these older-style callbacks are still very much in use in tons of PHP codebases. Apr 24, 2015 at 19:53
With PHP 5.3, you can now do this:
function doIt($callback) { $callback(); }
doIt(function() {
// this will be done
});
Finally a nice way to do it. A great addition to PHP, because callbacks are awesome.
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2
Implementation of a callback is done like so
// This function uses a callback function.
function doIt($callback)
{
$data = "this is my data";
$callback($data);
}
// This is a sample callback function for doIt().
function myCallback($data)
{
print 'Data is: ' . $data . "\n";
}
// Call doIt() and pass our sample callback function's name.
doIt('myCallback');
Displays: Data is: this is my data
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24
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There are a few other ways to do it as shown above. I really thought the same. Sep 8, 2008 at 4:39
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3@Nick Retallack, I don't see what is so horrible about it. For the languages I know of, such as JavaScript and C#, they all can structure their callback function in such pattern. Coming from JavaScirpt and C#, I am really not used to call_user_func(). It makes me feel like I have to adapt myself to PHP, instead of the other way around.– AntonyDec 15, 2011 at 14:16
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4@Antony I was objecting to the fact that strings are function pointers in this language. I posted that comment three years ago, so I'm pretty used to it by now, but I think PHP is the only language I know of (other than shell scripting) where this is the case. Dec 15, 2011 at 19:00
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1@Antony I prefer to use the same syntax I use in javascript. So I don't even understand why people want to use
call_user_func()
When they have a syntax which enables them to dynamically call functions and make callbacks. I agree with you! Aug 17, 2013 at 12:25
One nifty trick that I've recently found is to use PHP's create_function()
to create an anonymous/lambda function for one-shot use. It's useful for PHP functions like array_map()
, preg_replace_callback()
, or usort()
that use callbacks for custom processing. It looks pretty much like it does an eval()
under the covers, but it's still a nice functional-style way to use PHP.
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6Unfortunately, the garbage collector doesn’t play very well with this construct producing potential memory leaks. If you’re out for performance, avoid create_function().– fuxiaMar 26, 2010 at 16:04
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Would you mind updating the answer with PHP 7.4 version (arrow functions) and adding a warning about deprecated
create_function()
?– Dharman ♦Mar 1, 2020 at 14:09
well... with 5.3 on the horizon, all will be better, because with 5.3, we'll get closures and with them anonymous functions
You will want to verify whatever your calling is valid. For example, in the case of a specific function, you will want to check and see if the function exists:
function doIt($callback) {
if(function_exists($callback)) {
$callback();
} else {
// some error handling
}
}
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What if callback is not a function, but an array holding object and method?– d-_-bApr 29, 2010 at 11:59
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4
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1Both are good suggestions - It will be necessary to check your own particular implementation of how you do a callback. I was hoping to warn against calling something that didn't exist causing a fatal. I made the answer more general Apr 3, 2017 at 18:45
create_function
did not work for me inside a class. I had to use call_user_func
.
<?php
class Dispatcher {
//Added explicit callback declaration.
var $callback;
public function Dispatcher( $callback ){
$this->callback = $callback;
}
public function asynchronous_method(){
//do asynch stuff, like fwrite...then, fire callback.
if ( isset( $this->callback ) ) {
if (function_exists( $this->callback )) call_user_func( $this->callback, "File done!" );
}
}
}
Then, to use:
<?php
include_once('Dispatcher.php');
$d = new Dispatcher( 'do_callback' );
$d->asynchronous_method();
function do_callback( $data ){
print 'Data is: ' . $data . "\n";
}
?>
[Edit] Added a missing parenthesis. Also, added the callback declaration, I prefer it that way.
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1Doesn't the Dispatcher class require an attribute for $this->callback = $callback to work?– James P.Sep 13, 2011 at 1:02
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@james poulson: PHP is a dynamic language, so it works. But I was being lazy. I usually do declare properties, makes everyones life easier. Your question made me look at that code again and spot a syntax error, thou. Thanks Sep 13, 2011 at 9:28
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Woudn't it be safer to declare the do_callback function before creating the Dispatcher object and calling the async method? Jan 8, 2016 at 19:21
For those who don't care about breaking compatibility with PHP < 5.4
, I'd suggest using type hinting to make a cleaner implementation.
function call_with_hello_and_append_world( callable $callback )
{
// No need to check $closure because of the type hint
return $callback( "hello" )."world";
}
function append_space( $string )
{
return $string." ";
}
$output1 = call_with_hello_and_append_world( function( $string ) { return $string." "; } );
var_dump( $output1 ); // string(11) "hello world"
$output2 = call_with_hello_and_append_world( "append_space" );
var_dump( $output2 ); // string(11) "hello world"
$old_lambda = create_function( '$string', 'return $string." ";' );
$output3 = call_with_hello_and_append_world( $old_lambda );
var_dump( $output3 ); // string(11) "hello world"
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1Warning
create_function()
has been DEPRECATED as of PHP 7.2.0. Relying on this function is highly discouraged.– Dharman ♦Mar 1, 2020 at 14:12
I cringe every time I use create_function()
in php.
Parameters are a coma separated string, the whole function body in a string... Argh... I think they could not have made it uglier even if they tried.
Unfortunately, it is the only choice when creating a named function is not worth the trouble.