I'm building a unit testing framework for PHP and I was curious if there is a way to get a list of an objects methods which excludes the parent class's methods. So given this:
class Foo
{
public function doSomethingFooey()
{
echo 'HELLO THERE!';
}
}
class Bar extends Foo
{
public function goToTheBar()
{
// DRINK!
}
}
I want a function which will, given the parameter new Bar()
return:
array( 'goToTheBar' );
WITHOUT needing to instantiate an instance of Foo. (This means get_class_methods
will not work).
From the PHP Documenation
This will not instantiate the class, and will allow you to get an array of all of the classes methods.
I'm not completely certain that this won't return parent class methods, but
get_class_methods
will work for uninstantiated classes. If it does, you can use Alix's answer to remove the parent's method from the array. Or Lukman's to use the reverse engineering aspect of PHP internal code base to get the methods.BTW, if you type in
new Bar()
, it is going to create a new instance of Foo, as Bar extends Foo. The only way you can not instantiate Foo is by referring to it statically. Therefore, your request:Has no possible solution. If you give
new Bar()
as an argument, it will instantiate the class.For anyone else wondering how to check if specific method belongs to specified class or its parent class, you can do this by getting its class name and then comparing it with actual class name like following.
You can use
get_class_methods()
without instantiating the class:So the following would work:
Assuming there aren't repeated methods in the parent class. Still, Lukman's answer does a better job. =)
Use ReflectionClass, for example: