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How to use
Once you have your implementation completed, simply create a new instance of your DTO.
$person = new Person();
Property overloading
If a getter and or setter method has been defined for a property, then it becomes accessible in multiple ways.
The following example illustrates how the name
property can be set and retrieved, in multiple ways.
// Name can be set using normal setter methods
$person->setName('John');
// But you can also just set the property itself
$person->name = 'Jack'; // Will automatically invoke setName()
// And you can also set it using an array-accessor
$person['name'] = 'Jane'; // Will also automatically invoke setName()
// ... //
// Obtain name using the regular getter method
$name = $person->getName();
// Can also get it via invoking the property directly
$name = $person->name; // Will automatically invoke getName()
// Lastly, it can also be access via an array-accessor
$name = $person['name']; // Also invokes the getName()
For additional information, please read about Mutators and Accessor, PHP's overloading, and PHP's Array-Access
TIP
By adding a @property
tag to your interface or concrete implementation, your IDE will should be able to auto-complete the overloadable properties.
Behind the Scene
The Overload
component is responsible most of the magic.