I have to correct my implementation from before. The example before only supported correct read-access but failed on setting new values after creation of the ArrayMultiObject. Also i had to correct a bug that occured from my CopyPasteChange into the comment textarea.
This snippet now hopefully implements a fully functional multidimensional array, represented by an ArrayObject:
<?php
class ArrayMultiObject extends ArrayObject
{
function __construct($array, $flags = 0, $iterator_class = "ArrayIterator")
{
$objects = array();
foreach($array AS $key => $value) {
if(is_array($value)) {
$objects[$key] = new ArrayMultiObject($value, $flags, $iterator_class);
} else {
$objects[$key] = $value;
}
}
parent::__construct($objects, $flags, $iterator_class);
}
public function offsetSet($name, $value)
{
if(is_array($value)) {
$value = new ArrayMultiObject($value);
}
return parent::offsetSet($name, $value);
}
}
?>
For some application I needed to reverse some standard iterators.
So I mocked up this flexible function.
Enjoy
<?php
function reverse_iterator(Iterator $iterator){
$type = get_class($iterator);
$array = array_reverse(iterator_to_array($iterator), true);
return new $type($array);
}
?>
My favorite recursive iteration solution:
<?php
$dir_iter = new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($root_dir, 0);
$all_iter = new RecursiveIteratorIterator($dir_iter);
foreach ($all_iter as $abs_path => $info) {
// your code here
}
?>
You can't just loop on $dir_iter, because it will return the exact same results as the plain DirectoryIterator. It is the RecursiveIteratorIterator that iterates over the children of the RecursiveDirectoryIterator if they're present.
Passing 0 as the flags to the RecursiveDirectoryIterator means that $info will be a RecursiveDirectoryIterator object, and then you can use the getSubPath() and getSubPathname() methods to find the directory (or directory and filename, resp.) relative to $root_dir. By default, $info is a SplFileInfo object instead, which only knows its full pathname, including $root_dir. The RecursiveDirectoryIterator extends SplFileInfo, so all those methods are still available.
This code is an example. By using classes like this, you gives a chance to create classes which extends another class but have most of the ability what a class extends ArrayObject (like multiple inheritance):
<?php
class foo
{
public $foo = 'foo';
} // class
class foobar extends foo implements ArrayAccess,IteratorAggregate,Countable
{
public function offsetExists($offset)
{
$array = array(1, 2, 3, 4);
return array_key_exists($offset, $array);
}
public function offsetGet($offset)
{
$array = array(1, 2, 3, 4);
return $array[$offset];
}
public function offsetSet($offset, $value)
{
// Makes "array" to readonly
}
public function offsetUnset($offset)
{
// Makes "array" to readonly
}
function count()
{
$array = array(1, 2, 3, 4);
return count($array);
} // function
function getArray()
{
return array(1, 2, 3, 4);
} // function
function getIterator()
{
return new ArrayIterator(array(1, 2, 3, 4));
} // function
function __toString()
{
return 'String test';
} // function
} // class
$foobar = new foobar();
print $foobar[0].'<br/>';
print $foobar->foo.'<br/>';
print count($foobar).'<br/>';
foreach ($foobar as $k=>$v)
{
print $k.'=>'.$v.'<br/>';
} // foreach
var_dump($foobar->getArray());
print $foobar;
/* Generated output:
1
foo
4
0=>1
1=>2
2=>3
3=>4
array
0 => int 1
1 => int 2
2 => int 3
3 => int 4
String test
*/
?>
For proper use you must be define all these methods except getArray()
Browse SPL's sources to be a very helpful think.
ps.: sry for my english
<?php
/*
How to store SPL Iterator results (rather than just echo-and-forget):
The library of Iterators are object based, so you need to trick the little rascals into an array.
Here's how (two ways) ...
1. Explicit typecasts: $a[] = (array)$Obj->objMethod();
2. Array definition: $a[] = array( key => $Obj->objMethod() );
Examples: DirectoryIterator()
*/
// 1. explicity typecast object as array
foreach ( new DirectoryIterator('./') as $Item )
{
$fname = (array)$Item->getFilename();
$dir_listing[] = $fname[0];
}
//
echo "<pre>";
print_r($dir_listing); unset($dir_listing);
echo"</pre><hr />";
//
// or
// 2. define array as key => object->method
foreach ( new DirectoryIterator('./') as $Item )
{
$dir_listing[] = array (
"fname" => $Item->getFilename(),
"path" => $Item->getPathname(),
"size" => $Item->getSize(),
"mtime" => $Item->getMTime()
);
}
//
echo "<pre>";
print_r($dir_listing); unset($dir_listing);
echo"</pre>";
//
?>
The most comprehensive of all tutorials regarding SPL has been written with some help from Marcus and can be found here.
http://www.phpro.org/tutorials/Introduction-to-SPL.html
Enjoy
These to funtions has excatly the same output, the only diff. is in which directory iterator they use. I hope someone out there can use it:
<?php
function listfilesin1 ($dir = ".", $depth=0) {
echo "Dir: ".$dir."<br/>";
foreach(new DirectoryIterator($dir) as $file) {
if (!$file->isDot()) {
if ($file->isDir()) {
$newdir = $file->getPathname();
listfilesin1($newdir, $depth+1);
} else {
echo "($depth)".$file->getPathname() . "<br/>";
}
}
}
}
function listfilesin2 ($dir = ".", $depth=0) {
echo "Dir: ".$dir."<br/>";
foreach(new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($dir) as $file) {
if ($file->hasChildren(false)) {
$newdir = $file->key();
listfilesin2($newdir, $depth+1);
} else {
echo "($depth)".$file->key() . "<br/>";
}
}
}
listfilesin();
?>
You may access the ArrayObject as an array by using explicit typecasts:
class myArrayObject extends ArrayObject
{
function getArray()
{
return (array) $this;
}
}
Something to note that, at least to me, seems pretty important and is not entirely clear in the documentation is the fact that the ArrayObject class supports get/set on uni-dimensional keys and get ONLY on *passed* multi-dimensional keys/paths (see source below). If you, like me, need to support array accesss overloading for multi-dimensional data, you will need to derive from ArrayObject and overide the ArrayAccess interface methods to "walk" passed data and convert embedded arrays to objects of some kind...
Reference Bug 34816 @ http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=34816.
Illustration of the issue:
$a = array(
"test" => array(
"one" => "dunno",
"two" => array(
"peekabo" => "do you see me?",
"anyone" => array("there")
)
)
);
$oArray = new ArrayObject($a);
var_dump($oArray);
$oArray["three"] = "No problems here.";
echo "\n\\test\\one == " . $oArray["test"]["one"] . "\n\n";
// NEITHER of the two below will work!
$oArray["test"]["one"] = "Yes I do!";
$oArray["test"]["yes"] = array(
"hello" => "Goodbye!"
);
var_dump($oArray);
---
Note from the extension author:
Actually there is RecursiveArrayObject and RecursiveArrayIterator to deal with recursive structures. However this does not always solve all multidimensional issues as expected.
There is a RecursiveFilterIterator that makes the above code much easier. And then ther is ParentIterator thta is already a filtering recursive iterator that only accepts elements that have children, with a RecursiveDirectoryIterator as inner iterator you would obviously get only the directories. Further more it ensures that it creates the correct children. All in all you simply need to do this:
$it = new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($path);
$it = new ParentIterator($it);
$it = new RecursiveIteratorIteator($it);
foreach($it as $dir => $o) { ... }
In addition to "mastabog at hotmail dot com"`s note about the recursive directory iterator, his method skips symlinked directories, because getChildren() doesn't return true if the directory is symlinked.
To fix this, the script should always instanciate an innerInterator when dealing with symlinked directories like so:
<?
class DirectoriesOnlyIterator extends FilterIterator implements RecursiveIterator
{
public function __construct ($path)
{
parent::__construct(new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($path));
}
public function accept()
{
return $this->getInnerIterator()->hasChildren();
}
public function hasChildren ()
{
return $this->hasChildren() || $this->isLink();
}
public function getChildren ()
{
return new self($this->getInnerIterator()->getPathname());
}
}
Just a follow up on dave at tunasoft's post. To give his example of ArrayAccess use of foreach, it's easiest to implement IteratorAggregate and use the ArrayIterator object as the iterator, as below:
<?php
class Collection implements ArrayAccess,IteratorAggregate
{
public $objectArray = Array();
//**these are the required iterator functions
function offsetExists($offset)
{
if(isset($this->objectArray[$offset])) return TRUE;
else return FALSE;
}
function & offsetGet($offset)
{
if ($this->offsetExists($offset)) return $this->objectArray[$offset];
else return (false);
}
function offsetSet($offset, $value)
{
if ($offset) $this->objectArray[$offset] = $value;
else $this->objectArray[] = $value;
}
function offsetUnset($offset)
{
unset ($this->objectArray[$offset]);
}
function & getIterator()
{
return new ArrayIterator($this->objectArray);
}
//**end required iterator functions
public function doSomething()
{
echo "I'm doing something";
}
}
?>
I LOVE the new SPL stuff in PHP. The above allows you to have methods inside of your array, and when treated as an array the data components are returned, such as:
<?php
class Contact
{
protected $name = NULL;
public function set_name($name)
{
$this->name = $name;
}
public function get_name()
{
return ($this->name);
}
}
$bob = new Collection();
$bob->doSomething();
$bob[] = new Contact();
$bob[5] = new Contact();
$bob[0]->set_name("Superman");
$bob[5]->set_name("a name of a guy");
foreach ($bob as $aContact)
{
echo $aContact->get_name() . "\r\n";
}
?>
Would work just fine. This make code so much simpler and easy to follow, it's great. This is exactly the direction I had hoped PHP5 was going!
I'v done with my PluginsManager... Sample code to use plugins may looks lije this:
<?php
require_once('lib/plugins-manager.inc.php');
// Load and use conctere plugin module
$p = new Plugin('test.class.php');
$test = $p->class_factory('test', 1, 2);
$test->foo();
// ... oneliner ;)
$p = $pm['test.class.php']->class_factory('test', 1, 2)->foo();
// Scan for plugable modules, construct an instance and call foo()
$pm = new PluginsManager('.');
foreach ($pm as $p)
{
$p->class_factory('test', 1, 2)->foo();
}
?>
You may download php files at my tw.o page: http://tikiwiki.org/tiki-index.php?page=UserPagezaufi (see page attachments below)
Excelent article here by Harry Fuecks...
http://www.sitepoint.com/print/php5-standard-library
and some auto generated documentation that could be of some use here...
http://www.php.net/~helly/php/ext/spl/index.html
There are some interfaces used here that are not documented. It took a bit to figure this one out, but you can create your own ArrayObject type class (that is, one who's objects can be access using the array [$index] syntax).
Your class must just implement ArrayAccess. Which has four abstract methods you must define. For example:
<?php
class Collection Implements ArrayAccess{
protected $array;
function offsetExists($offset){
if(isset($this->array[$offset])){
return TRUE;
}
else{
return FALSE;
}
}
function offsetGet($offset){
return $this->array[$offset];
}
function offsetSet($offset, $value){
if($offset){
$this->array[$offset] = $value;
}
else{
$this->array[] = $value;
}
}
function offsetUnset($offset){
}
}
?>
You'll have to jump through a couple more hoops to get foreach and print_r and the likes to behave properly. But with just this, you can :
<?php
$col = new Collction();
$col[] = new ObjectX();
$col[] = new ObjectX(123);
echo $col[0]->name;
// etc.
?>
Here's a sample implementation of the RecursiveDirectoryIterator class. It prints a simple treeview of a given directory:
<?php
function recurse($it) {
echo '<ul>';
for( ; $it->valid(); $it->next()) {
if($it->isDir() && !$it->isDot()) {
printf('<li class="dir">%s</li>', $it->current());
if($it->hasChildren()) {
$bleh = $it->getChildren();
echo '<ul>' . recurse($bleh) . '</ul>';
}
} elseif($it->isFile()) {
echo '<li class="file">'. $it->current() . ' (' . $it->getSize(). ' Bytes)</li>';
}
}
echo '</ul>';
}
recurse(new RecursiveDirectoryIterator('D:/'));
?>