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Chapter 13. Classes and Objects |
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Note: In PHP 3, objects will lose their class association throughout the process of
serialization and unserialization. The resulting variable is of type object, but has no class and
no methods, thus it is pretty useless (it has become just like an array with a funny syntax).
| Caution |
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The following information is valid for PHP 4 only.
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serialize() returns a string containing a
byte-stream representation of any value that can be stored in PHP. unserialize() can use this string to recreate the original
variable values. Using serialize to save an object will save all variables in an object. The
functions in an object will not be saved, only the name of the class.
In order to be able to unserialize() an
object, the class of that object needs to be defined. That is, if you have an object $a of class A
on page1.php and serialize this, you'll get a string that refers to class A and contains all values
of variabled contained in $a. If you want to be able to unserialize this on page2.php, recreating
$a of class A, the definition of class A must be present in page2.php. This can be done for example
by storing the class defintion of class A in an include file and including this file in both
page1.php and page2.php.
classa.inc:
class A
{
var $one = 1;
function show_one()
{
echo $this->one;
}
}
page1.php:
include("classa.inc");
$a = new A;
$s = serialize($a);
// store $s somewhere where page2.php can find it.
$fp = fopen("store", "w");
fputs($fp, $s);
fclose($fp);
page2.php:
// this is needed for the unserialize to work properly.
include("classa.inc");
$s = implode("", @file("store"));
$a = unserialize($s);
// now use the function show_one() of the $a object.
$a->show_one();
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If you are using sessions and use
session_register() to register objects, these objects are serialized automatically at the
end of each PHP page, and are unserialized automatically on each of the following pages. This
basically means that these objects can show up on any of your pages once they become part of your
session.
It is strongly recommended that you include the class definitions of all such registered
objects on all of your pages, even if you do not actually use these classes on all of your pages.
If you don't and an object is being unserialized without its class definition being present, it
will lose its class association and become an object of class stdClass without any
functions available at all, that is, it will become quite useless.
So if in the example above $a became part of a session by running
session_register("a"), you should include the file classa.inc on all of your pages,
not only page1.php and page2.php.
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