14

I have a variable length array that I need to transpose into a list of parameters for a function.

I hope there is a neat way of doing this - but I cannot see how.

The code that I am writing will be calling a method in a class - but I will not know the name of the method, nor how many parameters it has.

I tried this - but it doesn't work:

$params = array(1 => "test", 2 => "test2", 3 => "test3");
ClassName::$func_name(implode($params, ","));

The above lumps all of the values into the first parameter of the function. Whereas it should be calling the function with 3 parameter values (test, test2, test3).

What I need is this:

ClassName::$func_name("test", "test2", "test3");

Any ideas how to do this neatly?

2 Answers 2

27

Yes, use call_user_func_array():

call_user_func_array('function_name', $parameters_array);

You can use this to call methods in a class too:

class A {
  public function doStuff($a, $b) {
    echo "[$a,$b]\n";
  }
}

$a = new A;
call_user_func_array(array($a, 'doStuff'), array(23, 34));
2
  • Cletus - Thanks!! This worked a treat. I hope all the hair I pulled out will grow back :-) Commented Nov 25, 2009 at 0:13
  • Meanwhile using Python : function_name(*parameters_array)... I really got to love PHP. Commented Jun 13, 2014 at 19:03
-2

You could use eval:

  eval("$func_name(" . implode($params, ",") . ");");

Though you might need to do some lambda trickery to get your parameters quoted and/or escaped:

  $quoted_escaped_params = array_map(create_function('$a', 'return "\"". str_replace("\"",` "\\\"", $a) . "\""'), $params);
1
  • Yeah - Thanks Frank! I tried this but got bogged down with the quoting of the array values. bit messy... Commented Nov 25, 2009 at 0:12

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