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I'm trying to make a PHP (5) object that can iterate through its properties, building an SQL query based only on its public properties, not its private ones.

As this parent object method is to be used by child objects, I can't simply choose to skip the private properties by name (I won't know what they are in the child objects).

Is there a simple way to detect from within an object which of its properties are private?

Here's a simplified example of what I've got so far, but this output includes the value of $bar:

class testClass { public $foo = 'foo'; public $fee = 'fee'; public $fum = 'fum'; private $bar = 'bar'; function makeString() { $string = ""; foreach($this as $field => $val) { $string.= " property '".$field."' = '".$val."' <br/>"; } return $string; } } $test = new testClass(); echo $test->makeString(); 

Gives the output:

property 'foo' = 'foo' property 'fee' = 'fee' property 'fum' = 'fum' property 'bar' = 'bar' 

I'd like it to not include 'bar'.

If there's a better way to iterate through just the public properties of an object, that would work here too.

8 Answers 8

22

Check this code from http://php.net/manual/reflectionclass.getproperties.php#93984

 public function listProperties() { $reflect = new ReflectionObject($this); foreach ($reflect->getProperties(ReflectionProperty::IS_PUBLIC /* + ReflectionProperty::IS_PROTECTED*/) as $prop) { print $prop->getName() . "\n"; } } 
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Comments

15

You can use Reflection to examine the properties of the class. To get only public and protected properties, profile a suitable filter to the ReflectionClass::getProperties method.

Here's a quicky example of your makeString method using it.

public function makeString() { $string = ""; $reflection = new ReflectionObject($this); $properties = $reflection->getProperties(ReflectionProperty::IS_PUBLIC); foreach ($properties as $property) { $name = $property->getName(); $value = $property->getValue($this); $string .= sprintf(" property '%s' = '%s' <br/>", $name, $value); } return $string; } 

2 Comments

Thanks - I think powtac beat you to it by about 30 seconds, but yes, that works exactly as needed.
Yeah, I guess too much time was spent making a pretty answer with neat and tidy links to the docs. Lesson learned, quick and dirty answers from here on in! :-)
6

A quicker solution that I found:

class Extras { public static function get_vars($obj) { return get_object_vars($obj); } } 

and then call inside of your testClass:

$vars = Extras::get_vars($this); 

additional reading in PHP.net

Comments

5

You can easily use the Reflection API to check the visibility of properties:

$rp = new \ReflectionProperty($object, $property); if ($rp->isPrivate()) { // Do if the property is private } else { // Do if the property is public or protected } 

1 Comment

This should be a method not a property e.g. $rp->isPrivate()
2
foreach (get_class_vars(get_class($this)) .... 

4 Comments

There is also the reflection class and the magic method __get()
I'm afraid I'm ignorant of the reflection class - I'll need to do some heavy Googling. Thanks for the pointer.
I ignored it in the past too, but then I figured out the great opportunities you can have with it.
one more tool in the toolbox
2

If you cast the object to an array before iterating over it, the private and protected members will have special prefixes:

class Test{ public $a = 1; private $b = 1; protected $c = 1; } $a = new Test(); var_dump((array) $a); 

displays this:

array(3) { ["a"]=> int(1) ["Testb"]=> int(1) ["*c"]=> int(1) } 

There are hidden characters there too, that don't get displayed. But you can write code to detect them. For example, the regular expression /\0\*\0(.*)$/ will match protected keys, and /\0.*\0(.*)$/ will match private ones. In both, the first capturing group matches the member name.

Comments

2
$propertyName = 'bar'; if(in_array(propertyName, array_keys(get_class_vars(get_class($yourObject))))) { } 

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0

You can use an array to store public properties, add some wrapper method and use array to insert data to SQL.

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