Nathan Rixham schreef:
Not sure why I'm sharing this; but it could be a gotcha
been there, got the T-shirt, see below for my work around.
class testOuter { private $base;public function __construct(){ $this->base = new testBase; } public function __call( $methodName , $values ) { echo __METHOD__ . PHP_EOL; print_r( $values ); $this->base->test( $values );
$this->base->__call( $methodName, $values ); or call_user_func_array(array($this->base, 'test'), $values); I prefer the first one because AFAIK it's faster, and it's easier to read :-)
} } $test = new testOuter; $test->test( 'test' ); ?> output: testOuter::__call Array ( [0] => test ) testBase::__call Array ( [0] => Array ( [0] => test ) ) point:note the $values keep getting nested into an array one deeper; get's frustrating when dealing with passing arrays and detecting whats in them! [consider if( count($values) ) or even foreach etc..]!
-- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

