Just like we do with __ToString, is there a way to define a method for casting?
$obj = (MyClass) $another_class_obj;
There is no need to type cast in php.
Edit: Since this topic seems to cause some confusion, I thought I'd elaborate a little.
In languages such as Java, there are two things that may carry type. The compiler has a notion about type, and the run time has another idea about types. The compilers types are tied to variables, whereas the run time engine tracks the type of values (Which are assigned to variables). The variable types are known at compile time, whereas the value types are only known at run time.
If a piece of input code violates the compilers type system, the compiler will barf and halt compilation. In other words, it's impossible to compile a piece of code that violates the static type system. This catches a certain class of errors. For example, take the following piece of (simplified) Java code:
class Alpha {}
class Beta extends Alpha {
public void sayHello() {
System.out.println("Hello");
}
}
If we now did this:
Alpha a = new Beta();
we would be fine, since Beta
is a subclass of Alpha
, and therefore a valid value for the variable a
of type Alpha
. However, if we proceed to do:
a.sayHello();
The compiler would give an error, since the method sayHello
isn't a valid method for Alpha
- Regardless that we know that a
is actually a Beta
.
Enter type casting:
((Beta) a).sayHello();
Here we tell the compiler that the variable a
should - in this case - be treated as a Beta
. This is known as type casting. This loophole is very useful, because it allows polymorphism in the language, but obviously it is also a back door for all sorts of violations of the type system. In order to maintain some type safety, there are therefore some restrictions; You can only cast to types that are related. Eg. up or down a hierarchy. In other words, you wouldn't be able to cast to a completely unrelated class Charlie
.
It's important to note that all this happens in the compiler - That is, it happens before the code even runs. Java can still get in to run time type errors. For example, if you did this:
class Alpha {}
class Beta extends Alpha {
public void sayHello() {
System.out.println("Hello");
}
}
class Charlie extends Alpha {}
Alpha a = new Charlie();
((Beta) a).sayHello();
The above code is valid for the compiler, but at run time, you'll get an exception, since the cast from Beta
to Charlie
is incompatible.
Meanwhile, back at the PHP-farm.
The following is valid to the PHP-compiler - It'll happily turn this into executable byte code, but you'll get a run time error:
class Alpha {}
class Beta extends Alpha {
function sayHello() {
print "Hello";
}
}
$a = new Alpha();
$a->sayHello();
This is because PHP variables don't have type. The compiler has no idea about what run time types are valid for a variable, so it doesn't try to enforce it. You don't specify the type explicitly as in Java either. There are type hints, yes, but these are simply run time contracts. The following is still valid:
// reuse the classes from above
function tellToSayHello(Alpha $a) {
$a->sayHello();
}
tellToSayHello(new Beta());
Even though PHP variables don't have types, the values still do. A particular interesting aspect of PHP, is that it is possible to change the type of a value. For example:
// The variable $foo holds a value with the type of string
$foo = "42";
echo gettype($foo); // Yields "string"
// Here we change the type from string -> integer
settype($foo, "integer");
echo gettype($foo); // Yields "integer"
This feature some times confused with type casting, but that is a misnomer. The type is still a property of the value, and the type-change happens in runtime - not at compile time.
The ability to change type is also quite limited in PHP. It is only possible to change type between simple types - not objects. Thus, it isn't possible to change the type from one class to another. You can create a new object and copy the state, but changing the type isn't possible. PHP is a bit of an outsider in this respect; Other similar languages treat classes as a much more dynamic concept than PHP does.
Another similar feature of PHP is that you can clone a value as a new type, like this:
// The variable $foo holds a value with the type of string
$foo = "42";
echo gettype($foo); // Yields "string"
// Here we change the type from string -> integer
$bar = (integer) $foo;
echo gettype($bar); // Yields "integer"
Syntactically this looks a lot like how a typecast is written in statically typed languages. It's therefore also often confused with type casting, even though it is still a runtime type-conversion.
To summarise: Type casting is an operation that changes the type of a variable (not the value). Since variables are without type in PHP, it is not only impossible to do, but a nonsensical thing to ask in the first place.
I do not believe there is a overloading operator in PHP to handle that, however:
<?php
class MyClass {
protected $_number;
static public function castFrom($obj) {
$new = new self();
if (is_int($obj)) {
$new->_number = $obj;
} else if ($obj instanceOf MyNumberClass){
/// some other type of casting
}
return $new;
}
}
$test = MyClass::castFrom(123123);
var_dump($test);
Is one way to handle it.
I mainly need type casting to enable intellisense - so I just create a type cast helper:
function castToTest($val): Test
{
return $val;
}
$test = castToTest(require("someFile.php"));
Returning from a file is kind of ugly and does not allow for type hinting, so this is a perfect example of how you can achieve intellisense by using a type cast helper.
You can create two reflection object then copy values to other example can be found at https://github.com/tarikflz/phpCast
public static function cast($sourceObject)
{
$destinationObject = new self();
try {
$reflectedSource = new ReflectionObject($sourceObject);
$reflectedDestination = new ReflectionObject($destinationObject);
$sourceProperties = $reflectedSource->getProperties();
foreach ($sourceProperties as $sourceProperty) {
$sourceProperty->setAccessible(true);
$name = $sourceProperty->getName();
$value = $sourceProperty->getValue($sourceObject);
if ($reflectedDestination->hasProperty($name)) {
$propDest = $reflectedDestination->getProperty($name);
$propDest->setAccessible(true);
$propDest->setValue($destinationObject, $value);
} else {
$destinationObject->$name = $value;
}
}
} catch (ReflectionException $exception) {
return $sourceObject;
}
return $destinationObject;
}
I think you need to type cast in order to make a better IDE. But php the language itself doesn't need type casting it does however support runtime type changes to the values in the variables. Take a look at autoboxing and unboxing. That's what php inherently does. So sorry no better than already are IDEs.