eloquent/cosmos

This package is abandoned and no longer maintained. No replacement package was suggested.

A library for representing and manipulating PHP class names.

2.3.1 2013-03-04 09:26 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2020-02-06 04:45:10 UTC


README

A library for representing and manipulating PHP class names.

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Installation

Available as Composer package eloquent/cosmos.

What is Cosmos?

Cosmos is a library for representing and manipulating PHP class names. It includes a ClassName object, as well as tools to help in resolving class names against a set of namespace and use statements.

ClassName object

This object is designed to represent any valid PHP class or namespace name. There are two ways to create a new ClassName object. From a string or from an array representing the parts of the class name, or 'atoms'. ClassName objects cannot be instatiated directly.

The two methods are demostrated below:

use Eloquent\Cosmos\ClassName;

$earth = ClassName::fromString('\MilkyWay\SolarSystem\Earth');
$mars = ClassName::fromAtoms(array('MilkyWay', 'SolarSystem', 'Mars'), true);

Note the second parameter in the fromAtoms() method. This boolean value determines whether the class name is absolute (starts with a namespace separator).

From here the ClassName object can be used to manipulate the class name or extract information about its constituent parts.

ClassName::atoms()

Returns the parts of the class name as an array of strings.

ClassName::isAbsolute()

Returns boolean true if the class name is absolute (begins with a namespace separator) or boolean false if it does not.

ClassName::isShortName()

Returns boolean true if the class name is not absolute and has only one atom. If either of these conditions is not met, false is returned.

ClassName::isEqualTo(ClassName $className)

Returns boolean true if the supplied class name is exactly equal to this class name. The supplied class name must have identical atoms and match the absolute-ness of this class name.

ClassName::isRuntimeEquivalentTo(ClassName $className)

Returns boolean true if the supplied class name is equivalent to this class name in a runtime context. The supplied class name must have identical atoms but absolute and relative class names are treated identically by PHP at runtime.

ClassName::join(ClassName $className)

Appends $className to the end of this class name and returns the result as a new ClassName object. Note that absolute class names cannot be joined.

ClassName::joinAtoms($atom, ...)

Appends the supplied atoms to the end of this class name and returns the result as a new ClassName object.

ClassName::joinAtomsArray(array $atoms)

Appends the supplied array of atoms to the end of this class name and returns the result as a new ClassName object.

ClassName::hasParent()

Returns boolean true if the class name has a parent namespace, or boolean false if it does not.

ClassName::parent()

Returns the parent namespace of this class name as a new ClassName object.

ClassName::shortName()

Returns the last atom of this class name as a new ClassName object.

ClassName::toAbsolute()

Returns the absolute version of this class name as a ClassName object. If this class name is already absolute, it will simply return itself.

ClassName::toRelative()

Returns the relative version of this class name as a ClassName object. If this class name is already relative, it will simply return itself.

ClassName::hasDescendant(ClassName $className)

Returns boolean true if this class name is one of the parent namespaces of $className or boolean false if it is not.

ClassName::stripNamespace(ClassName $namespaceName)

Strips $namespaceName from this class name and returns the result as a new, ClassName object relative to the supplied namespace name.

ClassName::exists($useAutoload = true)

Returns boolean true if the class name exists. Note that this does not take into account if the class name is absolute or relative. The $useAutoload parameter can be specified to prevent autoloading if necessary.

ClassName::string()

Returns a string representation of this class name. ClassName also implements __toString() which simply returns the result of this method.

Class name resolver

To use the class name resolver, first create a new resolver to represent the set of namespace and use statements to resolve against.

The first parameter represents the namespace statement. It must be supplied as a fully-qualified ClassName object. The second parameter is an array of tuples representing the use statements.

If a 1-tuple is supplied, it represents a use statement without an as clause. A 2-tuple represents a use statement with an attached as clause. The first element of the tuple is always a fully-qualified ClassName object. If present, the second element must be a short ClassName object. That is, one without any namespace separators.

use Eloquent\Cosmos\ClassName;
use Eloquent\Cosmos\ClassNameResolver;

$resolver = new ClassNameResolver(
    ClassName::fromString('\MilkyWay\SolarSystem'), // namespace
    array(
        array(
            ClassName::fromString('\MilkyWay\AlphaCentauri\ProximaCentauri'), // use
        ),
        array(
            ClassName::fromString('\Andromeda\GalacticCenter'), // use
            ClassName::fromString('Andromeda'), // as
        ),
    )
);

The above resolver is analogous to the following PHP code:

namespace MilkyWay\SolarSystem;

use MilkyWay\AlphaCentauri\ProximaCentauri;
use Andromeda\GalacticCenter as Andromeda;

The created resolver can now be used to determine the canonical version of any class name. Note that in the example below, ClassName objects are returned, not plain strings.

echo $resolver->resolve(ClassName::fromString('Earth'));
// outputs '\MilkyWay\SolarSystem\Earth'

echo $resolver->resolve(ClassName::fromString('ProximaCentauri'));
// outputs '\MilkyWay\AlphaCentauri\ProximaCentauri'

echo $resolver->resolve(ClassName::fromString('Andromeda'));
// outputs '\Andromeda\GalacticCenter'

echo $resolver->resolve(ClassName::fromString('TNO\Pluto'));
// outputs '\MilkyWay\SolarSystem\TNO\Pluto'

echo $resolver->resolve(ClassName::fromString('\Betelgeuse'));
// outputs '\Betelgeuse'