To create a new object , use the new
statement
to instantiate a class:
Example #1 Object Construction
<?php
class foo
{
function do_foo()
{
echo "Doing foo.";
}
}
$bar = new foo;
$bar->do_foo();
?>
For a full discussion, see the Classes and Objects chapter.
If an object is converted to an object , it is not
modified. If a value of any other type is converted to an
object , a new instance of the stdClass
built-in class is created. If the value was null
, the new instance will be
empty. An array converts to an object with properties
named by keys and corresponding values. Note that in this case before PHP 7.2.0 numeric keys
have been inaccessible unless iterated.
Example #2 Casting to an Object
<?php
$obj = (object) array('1' => 'foo');
var_dump(isset($obj->{'1'})); // outputs 'bool(true)'
// Deprecated as of PHP 8.1
var_dump(key($obj)); // outputs 'string(1) "1"'
?>
For any other value, a member variable named scalar
will contain
the value.
Example #3 (object)
cast
<?php
$obj = (object) 'ciao';
echo $obj->scalar; // outputs 'ciao'
?>
By far the easiest and correct way to instantiate an empty generic php object that you can then modify for whatever purpose you choose:
<?php $genericObject = new stdClass(); ?>
I had the most difficult time finding this, hopefully it will help someone else!
In PHP 7 there are a few ways to create an empty object:
<?php
$obj1 = new \stdClass; // Instantiate stdClass object
$obj2 = new class{}; // Instantiate anonymous class
$obj3 = (object)[]; // Cast empty array to object
var_dump($obj1); // object(stdClass)#1 (0) {}
var_dump($obj2); // object(class@anonymous)#2 (0) {}
var_dump($obj3); // object(stdClass)#3 (0) {}
?>
$obj1 and $obj3 are the same type, but $obj1 !== $obj3. Also, all three will json_encode() to a simple JS object {}:
<?php
echo json_encode([
new \stdClass,
new class{},
(object)[],
]);
?>
Outputs: [{},{},{}]
As of PHP 5.4, we can create stdClass objects with some properties and values using the more beautiful form:
<?php
$object = (object) [
'propertyOne' => 'foo',
'propertyTwo' => 42,
];
?>
Here a new updated version of 'stdObject' class. It's very useful when extends to controller on MVC design pattern, user can create it's own class.
Hope it help you.
<?php
class stdObject {
public function __construct(array $arguments = array()) {
if (!empty($arguments)) {
foreach ($arguments as $property => $argument) {
$this->{$property} = $argument;
}
}
}
public function __call($method, $arguments) {
$arguments = array_merge(array("stdObject" => $this), $arguments); // Note: method argument 0 will always referred to the main class ($this).
if (isset($this->{$method}) && is_callable($this->{$method})) {
return call_user_func_array($this->{$method}, $arguments);
} else {
throw new Exception("Fatal error: Call to undefined method stdObject::{$method}()");
}
}
}
// Usage.
$obj = new stdObject();
$obj->name = "Nick";
$obj->surname = "Doe";
$obj->age = 20;
$obj->adresse = null;
$obj->getInfo = function($stdObject) { // $stdObject referred to this object (stdObject).
echo $stdObject->name . " " . $stdObject->surname . " have " . $stdObject->age . " yrs old. And live in " . $stdObject->adresse;
};
$func = "setAge";
$obj->{$func} = function($stdObject, $age) { // $age is the first parameter passed when calling this method.
$stdObject->age = $age;
};
$obj->setAge(24); // Parameter value 24 is passing to the $age argument in method 'setAge()'.
// Create dynamic method. Here i'm generating getter and setter dynimically
// Beware: Method name are case sensitive.
foreach ($obj as $func_name => $value) {
if (!$value instanceOf Closure) {
$obj->{"set" . ucfirst($func_name)} = function($stdObject, $value) use ($func_name) { // Note: you can also use keyword 'use' to bind parent variables.
$stdObject->{$func_name} = $value;
};
$obj->{"get" . ucfirst($func_name)} = function($stdObject) use ($func_name) { // Note: you can also use keyword 'use' to bind parent variables.
return $stdObject->{$func_name};
};
}
}
$obj->setName("John");
$obj->setAdresse("Boston");
$obj->getInfo();
?>
<!--Example shows how to convert array to stdClass Object and how to access its value for display -->
<?php
$num = array("Garha","sitamarhi","canada","patna"); //create an array
$obj = (object)$num; //change array to stdClass object
echo "<pre>";
print_r($obj); //stdClass Object created by casting of array
$newobj = new stdClass();//create a new
$newobj->name = "India";
$newobj->work = "Development";
$newobj->address="patna";
$new = (array)$newobj;//convert stdClass to array
echo "<pre>";
print_r($new); //print new object
##How deals with Associative Array
$test = [Details=>['name','roll number','college','mobile'],values=>['Naman Kumar','100790310868','Pune college','9988707202']];
$val = json_decode(json_encode($test),false);//convert array into stdClass object
echo "<pre>";
print_r($val);
echo ((is_array($val) == true ? 1 : 0 ) == 1 ? "array" : "not an array" )."</br>"; // check whether it is array or not
echo ((is_object($val) == true ? 1 : 0 ) == 1 ? "object" : "not an object" );//check whether it is object or not
?>
Do you remember some JavaScript implementations?
// var timestamp = (new Date).getTime();
Now it's possible with PHP 5.4.*;
<?php
class Foo
{
public $a = "I'm a!";
public $b = "I'm b!";
public $c;
public function getB() {
return $this->b;
}
public function setC($c) {
$this->c = $c;
return $this;
}
public function getC() {
return $this->c;
}
}
print (new Foo)->a; // I'm a!
print (new Foo)->getB(); // I'm b!
?>
or
<?php
// $_GET["c"] = "I'm c!";
print (new Foo)
->setC($_GET["c"])
->getC(); // I'm c!
?>
You can create [recursive] objects with something like:
<?php
$literalObjectDeclared = (object) array(
'foo' => (object) array(
'bar' => 'baz',
'pax' => 'vax'
),
'moo' => 'ui'
);
print $literalObjectDeclared->foo->bar; // outputs "baz"!
?>
In response to harmor: if an array contains another array as a value, you can recursively convert all arrays with:
<?php
function arrayToObject( $array ){
foreach( $array as $key => $value ){
if( is_array( $value ) ) $array[ $key ] = arrayToObject( $value );
}
return (object) $array;
}
?>