eloquent/constance

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PHP constants as enumerations.

0.1.1 2014-01-29 12:37 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2020-02-06 04:51:48 UTC


README

PHP constants as enumerations.

The most recent stable version is 0.1.1 Current build status image Current coverage status image

Installation and documentation

What is Constance?

Constance is a library for representing PHP constants as an enumerated type. Constance supports both class-level and global constants, and is built upon a powerful enumeration library to provide a rich feature set.

Amongst other uses, Constance allows a developer to:

  • Type hint for a valid value as defined in a pre-existing set of constants. Examples include the PHP error levels, and PDO attributes.
  • Retrieve information about a constant from its value, such as its name (useful for logging and debugging).
  • Perform simple operations on sets of constants with bitwise values, including retrieving members by bit-mask, or composing a bit-mask from an array of members.

Constance is most useful for dealing with pre-defined constants that the developer has no control over. If it is within the developer's control to implement a first-class enumeration, then the recommended approach is to use an enumeration library directly.

Implementing an enumeration of constants

Constance does not provide any concrete classes, but instead provides abstract base classes to make implementation of constant enumerations extremely simple. There are two abstract base classes - AbstractClassConstant for class-level constants, and AbstractGlobalConstant for global constants.

Class-level constants

This example demonstrates how to define an enumeration of PDO attributes:

use Eloquent\Constance\AbstractClassConstant;

final class PdoAttribute extends AbstractClassConstant
{
    /**
     * The class to inspect for constants.
     */
    const CONSTANCE_CLASS = 'PDO';

    /**
     * The expression used to match constant names that should be included in
     * this enumeration.
     */
    const CONSTANCE_PATTERN = '{^ATTR_}';
}

As the example demonstrates, Constance enumerations are extremely simple to implement. The constant CONSTANCE_CLASS tells Constance which class to inspect for constants, and the optional constant CONSTANCE_PATTERN is a regular expression used to limit which of the constants defined in CONSTANCE_CLASS are defined as members of this enumeration. In this particular case, the expression limits the members to constants starting with ATTR_.

This enumeration can now be used to retrieve information about a PDO attribute constant when only its value is known at run-time:

$attribute = PdoAttribute::memberByValue(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE);

echo $attribute->name();          // outputs 'ATTR_ERRMODE'
echo $attribute->qualifiedName(); // outputs 'PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE'

PdoAttribute can also be used as a type hint that will only accept valid PDO attributes. Note the special static call syntax for accessing members of an enumeration:

class MyConnection
{
    public function setAttribute(PdoAttribute $attribute, $value)
    {
        // ...
    }
}

$connection = new MyConnection;
$connection->setAttribute(PdoAttribute::ATTR_AUTOCOMMIT(), true);
$connection->setAttribute(PdoAttribute::ATTR_PERSISTENT(), false);

Global constants

This example demonstrates how to define an enumeration of PHP error levels:

use Eloquent\Constance\AbstractGlobalConstant;

final class ErrorLevel extends AbstractGlobalConstant
{
    /**
     * The expression used to match constant names that should be included in
     * this enumeration.
     */
    const CONSTANCE_PATTERN = '{^E_}';
}

Global constants are even simpler to implement than class-level constants. The optional constant CONSTANCE_PATTERN is a regular expression used to limit which globally defined constants are defined as members of this enumeration. In this particular case, the expression limits the members to constants starting with E_.

The above enumeration will contain members for all the defined PHP error level constants, such as E_NOTICE, E_WARNING, E_ERROR, E_ALL, and E_STRICT. Note that Constance provides some limited bitwise helper methods for dealing with such sets of constants with bitwise values, which will be discussed in a separate section.

Bitwise logic

Constance provides some methods for dealing with sets of constants that have bitwise values. The PHP error levels enumeration above serves as a good example of such a set.

Assuming the ErrorLevel enumeration described above, the set of members included in E_ALL can be determined like so:

$members = ErrorLevel::membersByBitmask(E_ALL);

$members now contains an array of enumeration members representing all the error levels included in E_ALL for the current run-time environment. Conversely, the members that are not included can be determined just as easily:

$members = ErrorLevel::membersExcludedByBitmask(E_ALL);

A bit-mask can also be generated for an arbitrary set of enumeration members, like so:

$members = array(ErrorLevel::E_NOTICE(), ErrorLevel::E_DEPRECATED());
$bitmask = ErrorLevel::membersToBitmask($members);

$bitmask now contains a bit-mask that matches only E_NOTICE or E_DEPRECATED.

Lastly, checking whether a given enumeration member matches a bit-mask is also extremely simple:

$isStrictByDefault = ErrorLevel::E_STRICT()->valueMatchesBitmask(E_ALL);

$isStrictByDefault will now contain a boolean value indicating whether E_ALL includes strict standards warnings for the current run-time environment.