You can use Reflection class instead:
<?php
$r = new ReflectionClass($class);
foreach($r->getInterfaces() as $in)
{
$in->getName();
}
class_implements
(PHP 5)
class_implements — Return the interfaces which are implemented by the given class
Popis
array class_implements
( mixed $class
[, bool $autoload
] )
This function returns an array with the names of the interfaces that the given class and its parents implement.
Parametre
- class
-
An object (class instance) or a string (class name).
- autoload
-
Whether to allow this function to load the class automatically through the __autoload magic method. Defaults to TRUE.
Vrátené hodnoty
Returns an array or FALSE on error.
ChangeLog
| Verzia | Popis |
|---|---|
| 5.1.0 | Added the option to pass the class parameter as a string. Added the autoload parameter. |
Príklady
Example#1 class_implements() example
<?php
interface foo { }
class bar implements foo {}
print_r(class_implements(new bar));
// since PHP 5.1.0 you may also specify the parameter as a string
print_r(class_implements('bar'));
function __autoload($class_name) {
require_once $class_name . '.php';
}
// use __autoload to load the 'not_loaded' class
print_r(class_implements('not_loaded', true));
?>
Výstup horeuvedeného príkladu bude niečo podobné tomuto:
Array ( [foo] => foo ) Array ( [interface_of_not_loaded] => interface_of_not_loaded )
class_implements
24-Jan-2006 09:51
trollll23 at yahoo dot com
25-Oct-2005 12:57
25-Oct-2005 12:57
Luckily, it prints out superinterfaces as well in reverse order so iterative searching works fine:
<?php
interface InterfaceA { }
interface InterfaceB extends InterfaceA { }
class MyClass implements InterfaceB { }
print_r(class_implements(new MyClass()));
?>
prints out:
Array
(
[InterfaceB] => InterfaceB
[InterfaceA] => InterfaceA
)
ludvig dot ericson at gmail dot nospam dot com
01-Aug-2005 12:41
01-Aug-2005 12:41
Hint:
<?php
in_array("your-interface", class_implements($object_or_class_name));
?>
would check if 'your-interface' is ONE of the implemented interfaces.
Note that you can use something similar to be sure the class only implements that, (whyever you would want that?)
<?php
array("your-interface") == class_implements($object_or_class_name);
?>
I use the first technique to check if a module has the correct interface implemented, or else it throws an exception.
