dantleech/invoke

Emulate named parameters

Maintainers

👁 dantleech

Package info

github.com/dantleech/invoke

pkg:composer/dantleech/invoke

Statistics

Installs: 821 967

Dependents: 9

Suggesters: 0

Stars: 5

Open Issues: 1

2.0.0 2021-05-01 17:22 UTC

Requires

  • php: ^7.2||^8.0

Suggests

None

Provides

None

Conflicts

None

Replaces

None

MIT 9b002d746d2c1b86cfa63a47bb5909cee58ef50c

  • daniel leech <daniel.woop@dantleech.com>

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2026-05-29 01:34:50 UTC


README

👁 Build Status

Utility class to create new classes or invoke methods using named arguments.

PHP does not currently support named parameters, this utility provides a convenient way to emulate them.

Installation

Require with composer:

$ composer require dantleech/invoke

Why

Sometimes arguments may be sourced from arrays e.g. for "deserialization" or instantiating configuration nodes).

Validating the existence of array keys, checking their types etc. is error prone and time consuming.

By using Invoke::new(MyObject::class, $array) you can map the array keys directly to the __construct parameters.

This library will, throw descriptive exceptions:

  • If there are extra keys.
  • If there are missing required keys (i.e. non-nullable values).
  • If the types are wrong.

Performance

Inoke::new(Class::class, []) is around 50x slower than new Class(), or 260,000 operations per second vs. ~13,000,000.

+--------------------------+---------+
| subject | mode |
+--------------------------+---------+
| benchInvokeNewClass | 3.720μs |
| benchInstantiateNewClass | 0.076μs |
+--------------------------+---------+

Usage

Instantiate a new class:

<?php

use DTL\Invoke\Invoke;

class Foobar
{
 public function __construct(string $arg1, string $arg2 = 'val1')
 {
 }
}

$foo = Invoke::new(Foobar::class, [
 'arg1' => 'value1'
]);

Invoke a method:

<?php

use DTL\Invoke\Invoke;

class Foobar
{
 // ...

 public function one(string $two)
 {
 }
}

$foo = Invoke::new(Foobar::class, [
 'arg1' => 'value1'
]);

$bar= Invoke::method($foo, 'one', [
 'two' => 'bar'
]);

Alternatives

nikolaposa/cascader Utility for creating objects in PHP from constructor parameters definitions.

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.

Please make sure to update tests as appropriate.

License

MIT