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PHP Functions
Function: create_function (PHP 4 >= 4.0.1, PHP 5) create_function -- Create an anonymous (lambda-style) functionDescriptionstring create_function ( string args, string code )Creates an anonymous function from the parameters passed, and returns a unique name for it. Usually the args will be passed as a single quote delimited string, and this is also recommended for the code . The reason for using single quoted strings, is to protect the variable names from parsing, otherwise, if you use double quotes there will be a need to escape the variable names, e.g. \$avar . You can use this function, to (for example) create a function from information gathered at run time:
Example 1. Creating an anonymous function with create_function() <?php $newfunc = create_function('$a,$b', 'return "ln($a) + ln($b) = " . log($a * $b);'); echo "New anonymous function: $newfunc\n"; echo $newfunc(2, M_E) . "\n"; // outputs // New anonymous function: lambda_1 // ln(2) + ln(2.718281828459) = 1.6931471805599 ?> Or, perhaps to have general handler function that can apply a set of operations to a list of parameters:
Example 2. Making a general processing function with create_function() <?php function process($var1, $var2, $farr) { foreach ($farr as $f) { echo $f($var1, $var2) . "\n"; } } // create a bunch of math functions $f1 = 'if ($a >=0) {return "b*a^2 = ".$b*sqrt($a);} else {return false;}'; $f2 = "return \"min(b^2+a, a^2,b) = \".min(\$a*\$a+\$b,\$b*\$b+\$a);"; $f3 = 'if ($a > 0 && $b != 0) {return "ln(a)/b = ".log($a)/$b; } else { return false; }'; $farr = array( create_function('$x,$y', 'return "some trig: ".(sin($x) + $x*cos($y));'), create_function('$x,$y', 'return "a hypotenuse: ".sqrt($x*$x + $y*$y);'), create_function('$a,$b', $f1), create_function('$a,$b', $f2), create_function('$a,$b', $f3) ); echo "\nUsing the first array of anonymous functions\n"; echo "parameters: 2.3445, M_PI\n"; process(2.3445, M_PI, $farr); // now make a bunch of string processing functions $garr = array( create_function('$b,$a', 'if (strncmp($a, $b, 3) == 0) return "** \"$a\" '. 'and \"$b\"\n** Look the same to me! (looking at the first 3 chars)";'), create_function('$a,$b', '; return "CRCs: " . crc32($a) . " , ".crc32(b);'), create_function('$a,$b', '; return "similar(a,b) = " . similar_text($a, $b, &$p) . "($p%)";') ); echo "\nUsing the second array of anonymous functions\n"; process("Twas brilling and the slithy toves", "Twas the night", $garr); ?> and when you run the code above, the output will be: Using the first array of anonymous functions parameters: 2.3445, M_PI some trig: -1.6291725057799 a hypotenuse: 3.9199852871011 b*a^2 = 4.8103313314525 min(b^2+a, a^2,b) = 8.6382729035898 ln(a/b) = 0.27122299212594 Using the second array of anonymous functions ** "Twas the night" and "Twas brilling and the slithy toves" ** Look the same to me! (looking at the first 3 chars) CRCs: -725381282 , 1908338681 similar(a,b) = 11(45.833333333333%) But perhaps the most common use for of lambda-style (anonymous) functions is to create callback functions, for example when using array_walk() or usort()
Example 3. Using anonymous functions as callback functions <?php $av = array("the ", "a ", "that ", "this "); array_walk($av, create_function('&$v,$k', '$v = $v . "mango";')); print_r($av); ?> outputs: Array ( [0] => the mango [1] => a mango [2] => that mango [3] => this mango ) an array of strings ordered from shorter to longer <?php $sv = array("small", "larger", "a big string", "it is a string thing"); print_r($sv); ?> outputs: Array ( [0] => small [1] => larger [2] => a big string [3] => it is a string thing ) sort it from longer to shorter <?php usort($sv, create_function('$a,$b','return strlen($b) - strlen($a);')); print_r($sv); ?> outputs: Array ( [0] => it is a string thing [1] => a big string [2] => larger [3] => small ) Related Function(s) |