get_class_methods

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

get_class_methodsObtiene los nombres de los métodos de una clase

Descripción

get_class_methods(mixed $class_name): array

Obtiene los nombres de los métodos de una clase.

Parámetros

class_name

El nombre de la clase o una instancia de objeto

Valores devueltos

Devuelve un array con los nombres de los métodos definidos para la clase especificada por class_name. Es caso de error devuelve null.

Ejemplos

Ejemplo #1 Ejemplo de get_class_methods()

<?php

class miclase {
// constructor
function __construct()
{
return(
true);
}

// método 1
function mifunc1()
{
return(
true);
}

// método 2
function mifunc2()
{
return(
true);
}
}

$métodos_clase = get_class_methods('miclase');
// o
$métodos_clase = get_class_methods(new miclase());

foreach (
$métodos_clase as $nombre_método) {
echo
"$nombre_método\n";
}

?>

El resultado del ejemplo sería:

miclase
mifunc1
mifunc2

Ver también

add a note

User Contributed Notes 4 notes

up
60
fschmengler at sgh-it dot eu
14 years ago
It should be noted that the returned methods are dependant on the current scope. See this example:

<?php
class C
{
private function
privateMethod()
{

}
public function
publicMethod()
{

}
public function
__construct()
{
echo
'$this:';
var_dump(get_class_methods($this));
echo
'C (inside class):';
var_dump(get_class_methods('C'));
}
}
$c = new C;
echo
'$c:';
var_dump(get_class_methods($c));
echo
'C (outside class):';
var_dump(get_class_methods('C'));
?>

Output:

$this:
array
0 => string 'privateMethod' (length=13)
1 => string 'publicMethod' (length=12)
2 => string '__construct' (length=11)

C (inside class):
array
0 => string 'privateMethod' (length=13)
1 => string 'publicMethod' (length=12)
2 => string '__construct' (length=11)

$c:
array
0 => string 'publicMethod' (length=12)
1 => string '__construct' (length=11)

C (outside class):
array
0 => string 'publicMethod' (length=12)
1 => string '__construct' (length=11)
up
6
polarglow06 at gmail dot com
9 years ago
I have created a very simple test runner using this function

function get_bar($text) {
$bar = "";
for($i=1; $i<=strlen($text); $i++) {
$bar .= "=";
}
return $bar;
}
class Tester {
function __construct() {
$this->run_tests();
}
// run the tests
function run_tests() {
print("Tester by Minhajul Anwar \n");
$class = get_class($this);
$test_methods = preg_grep('/^test/', get_class_methods($this));
foreach($test_methods as $method) {
$start_rep = "test: $class::$method";
$bar = get_bar($start_rep);
print("\n$start_rep\n$bar\n");
$this->$method();
print("\n");
}
}
}

now you just need to write your test class with tegst methods prefixed by 'test', and then just instantiate object of that test class of your, all those tests methods will get run automatically
The drawback is: your test methods must not accept any arguments

an example:
require '../autoload.php';
register_autoload_paths(realpath('./'));

class Test_Test extends Tester {
function test_something() {
print("method got executed");
}
function testAnotherThing() {
print("another test method");
}
}

$Test = new Test_Test();
up
4
php at stock-consulting dot com
17 years ago
Note that this function will answer both class AND instance methods ("class methods" are called "static" in PHP). Sort of a little "trap" for people who have in-depth experience with the OO terminology :-)
up
0
faizanakram99+php at gmail dot com
14 days ago
It is worth noting that get_class_methods($closure) doesn't return __invoke method even though it exists and is documented too.

See https://3v4l.org/VKjAF
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