Closure::bindTo
Duplicates the closure with a new bound object and class scope
Description
public Closurenull Closure::bindTo(objectnull $newThis
, objectstringnull $newScope
= "static")
The “bound object” determines the value $this
will
have in the function body and the “class scope” represents a class
which determines which private and protected members the anonymous
function will be able to access. Namely, the members that will be
visible are the same as if the anonymous function were a method of
the class given as value of the newScope
parameter.
Static closures cannot have any bound object (the value of the parameter
newThis
should be null
), but this method can
nevertheless be used to change their class scope.
This method will ensure that for a non-static closure, having a bound
instance will imply being scoped and vice-versa. To this end,
non-static closures that are given a scope but a null
instance are made
static and non-static non-scoped closures that are given a non-null
instance are scoped to an unspecified class.
Note:
If you only want to duplicate the anonymous functions, you can use
cloning instead.
Parameters
-
newThis
-
The object to which the given anonymous function should be bound, or
null
for the closure to be unbound.
-
newScope
-
The class scope to which the closure is to be associated, or
'static' to keep the current one. If an object is given, the type of the
object will be used instead. This determines the visibility of protected
and private methods of the bound object.
It is not allowed to pass (an object of) an internal class as this parameter.
Return Values
Returns the newly created Closure object
or null
on failure.
Examples
Example #1 Closure::bindTo example
<?php
class A
{
private $val;
public function __construct($val)
{
$this->val = $val;
}
public function getClosure()
{
// Returns closure bound to this object and scope
return function() {
return $this->val;
};
}
}
$ob1 = new A(1);
$ob2 = new A(2);
$cl = $ob1->getClosure();
echo $cl(), "\n";
$cl = $cl->bindTo($ob2);
echo $cl(), "\n";
?>
The above example will output
something similar to: