This extension implements the ability to register a class that handles the
method calls to a certain primitive type (string, array, ...). As such it
allows implementing APIs like $str->length()
.
The main purpose of this repo is to provide a proof of concept implementation that can be used to design the new APIs. The switch to object syntax for operations on primitive types is a unique opportunity for PHP to redesign many of its inconsistent core APIs. This repo provides the means to quickly prototype and test new APIs as userland code. Once the APIs are figured out it will be proposed for inclusion into PHP.
Note: The ability to register type handlers from userland is just for prototyping. It's not something I would actually want in PHP in the end.
Type handlers are registered through register_primitive_type_handler
. The
function takes a type name (like "string" or "array") and a class name. The
class is defined just like any other PHP class. The only difference is that
its $this
variable won't be an object, but rather the primitive type that
the class operates on:
<?php
class StringHandler {
public function length() {
return strlen($this);
}
}
register_primitive_type_handler('string', 'StringHandler');
The valid type names are: null
, bool
, int
, float
, string
, array
and resource
. Not all of those will make sense in practice, but for now they
are all supported.
As already pointed out in the introduction the main purpose of this repo is
designing good APIs for the primitive types. The implemented APIs are available
in the handlers/
folder (and are obviously work in progress). In order to
load these APIs just include the handlers/bootstrap.php
file.
In order to compile and install the extension run the following commands:
phpize
./configure --enable-scalar-objects
make
sudo make install
Note: I did not actually test those commands. I'm developing this in the ext/
directory of PHP and as such the extension is included in the main ./configure
after running ./buildconf
. So the commands are just guessing on how I think
it should work. If it doesn't work, give me a ping :)
The extension comes with a run-tests.php
file to run the tests. (To see
examples of the implemented APIs you should also look in the tests.) The
script is run as follows:
php run-tests.php -p php
Where php
is the path to your PHP executable.