Methods
object
VARIANT::VARIANT ( [mixed value [, int type [, int codepage]]] )
VARIANT class constructor. Parameters:
- value
initial value. if omitted, or set to NULL an VT_EMPTY object is created.
- type
specifies the content type of the VARIANT object. Possible values are
one of the VT_XXX the Section called Predefined Constants in Reference XIV, COM and .Net (Windows).
In PHP versions prior to PHP 5, you could force PHP to pass a variant
object by reference by OR'ing VT_BYREF
with the type. In PHP 5, this hack is not
supported; instead, PHP 5 can detect parameters passed by reference
automatically; they do not even need to be passed as VARIANT objects.
Consult the MSDN library for additional information
on the VARIANT type.
- codepage
specifies the codepage that is used to convert strings to
unicode. See the parameter of the same name in the
COM class for more information.
PHP versions prior to PHP 5 define a number of (undocumented) virtual properties
for instances of the VARIANT class; these properties have all been removed in
PHP 5 in favour of its more natural syntax; these differences are best
highlighted by example:
Example 1. Variant example, PHP 4.x style <?php
$v = new VARIANT(42);
print "The type is " . $v->type . "<br/>";
print "The value is " . $v->value . "<br/>";
?> |
|
Example 2. Variant example, PHP 5 style <?php
$v = new VARIANT(42);
print "The type is " . variant_get_type($v) . "<br/>";
print "The value is " . $v . "<br/>";
?> |
|
The reason for the change is that, internally, the COM extension sees
VARIANT, COM and DOTNET classes as the same thing, and the design
philosophy for these classes is that all property and member accesses are
passed through to COM with no interference. The new syntax is more
natural and less effort, and most of the removed virtual properties didn't
make any sense in a PHP context in any case.
Note:
PHP 5 takes a much simpler approach to handling VARIANTs; when returning
a value or fetching a variant property, the variant is converted to a PHP
value only when there is a direct mapping between the types that would
not result in a loss of information. In all other cases, the result is
returned as an instance of the VARIANT class. You can force PHP to
convert or evaluate the variant as a PHP native type by using a casting
operator explicitly, or implicitly casting to a string by
print()ing it. You may use the wide range of variant
functions to perform arithmetic operations on variants without forcing a
conversion or risking a loss of data.
See also variant_get_type().