You want to instantiate an object, but you don't know the name of the class until your code is executed. For example, you want to localize your site by creating an object belonging to a specific language. However, until the page is requested, you don't know which language to select.
Use a variable for your class name:
$language = $_REQUEST['language']; $valid_langs = array('en_US' => 'US English', 'en_GB' => 'British English', 'es_US' => 'US Spanish', 'fr_CA' => 'Canadian French'); if (isset($valid_langs[$language]) && class_exists($language)) { $lang = new $language; }
Sometimes you may not know the class name you want to instantiate at runtime, but you know part of it. For instance, to provide your class hierarchy a pseudo-namespace, you may prefix a leading series of characters in front of all class names; this is why we often use pc_ to represent PHP Cookbook or PEAR uses Net_ before all Networking classes.
However, while this is legal PHP:
$class_name = 'Net_Ping'; $class = new $class_name; // new Net_Ping
This is not:
$partial_class_name = 'Ping'; $class = new "Net_$partial_class_name"; // new Net_Ping
This, however, is okay:
$partial_class_name = 'Ping'; $class_prefix = 'Net_'; $class_name = "$class_prefix$partial_class_name"; $class = new $class_name; // new Net_Ping
So, you can't instantiate an object when its class name is defined using variable concatenation in the same step. However, because you can use simple variable names, the solution is to preconcatenate the class name.
Recipe 6.5 for more on variable variables; Recipe 7.12 for more on defining a call dynamically; documentation on class_exists( ) at http://www.php.net/class-exists.
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