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  • com_print_typeinfo()

    (PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7)

    Print out a PHP class definition for a dispatchable interface

    说明

    com_print_typeinfo(object $comobject[,string $dispinterface= NULL[,bool $wantsink= FALSE]]): bool

    The purpose of this function is to help generate a skeleton class for use as an event sink. You may also use it to generate a dump of any COM object, provided that it supports enough of the introspection interfaces, and that you know the name of the interface you want to display.

    参数

    $comobject

    $comobjectshould be either an instance of a COM object, or be the name of a typelibrary(which will be resolved according to the rules set out in com_load_typelib()).

    $dispinterface

    The name of anIDispatchdescendant interface that you want to display.

    $wantsink

    If set to TRUE, the corresponding sink interface will be displayed instead.

    返回值

    成功时返回TRUE,或者在失败时返回FALSE

    参见

    com_print_typeinfo is really useful if you're trying to figure out what properties and methods you have access to. For example, I might do:
    <?php
      $oExplorer = new COM("Shell.Application");
      com_print_typeinfo($oExplorer);
    ?>
    The first line shows me the class of the object (what VBScript calls 'typename'), in my case IShellDispatch4. It's frequently the case that if you plunk that in as the second argument to com_print_typeinfo, you get way more methods/properties coming back. Thus:
    <?php
      $oExplorer = new COM("Shell.Application");
      com_print_typeinfo($oExplorer, "IShellDispatch4");
    ?>
    Furthermore, you might get additional functions listed if you try lower number suffixes (or not). At any rate, it would be useful for PHP to have a typename function like VBScript does. For example, if you iterate through the Windows of $oExplorer you get both IE and Explorer windows and typename is the easy way to differentiate between them. Here's what I'm using:
    <?php
      function typeName($objCOM) {
      if (empty($objCOM)) return "no COM object";
      if (gettype($objCOM)!="object") return "not a COM object";
      ob_start();
      com_print_typeinfo($objCOM);
      $typeInfo = ob_get_contents();
      ob_end_clean();
      $pattern = "/^\\s*class (.*) \\{/";
      if (!($matchCnt = preg_match($pattern, $typeInfo, $aMatch))) return "Not found";
      return $aMatch[1];
    }
    ?>
    Csaba Gabor from Vienna
    In my particular version of PHP, the second and third arguments are not, in fact, optional.
    Passing in '' for both, however, yielded a bucketful of information.
    YMMV

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