| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229 | <?php/** * @link http://www.yiiframework.com/ * @copyright Copyright (c) 2008 Yii Software LLC * @license http://www.yiiframework.com/license/ */namespace yii\base;use yii\validators\Validator;/** * DynamicModel is a model class primarily used to support ad hoc data validation. * * The typical usage of DynamicModel is as follows, * * ```php * public function actionSearch($name, $email) * { *     $model = DynamicModel::validateData(compact('name', 'email'), [ *         [['name', 'email'], 'string', 'max' => 128], *         ['email', 'email'], *     ]); *     if ($model->hasErrors()) { *         // validation fails *     } else { *         // validation succeeds *     } * } * ``` * * The above example shows how to validate `$name` and `$email` with the help of DynamicModel. * The [[validateData()]] method creates an instance of DynamicModel, defines the attributes * using the given data (`name` and `email` in this example), and then calls [[Model::validate()]]. * * You can check the validation result by [[hasErrors()]], like you do with a normal model. * You may also access the dynamic attributes defined through the model instance, e.g., * `$model->name` and `$model->email`. * * Alternatively, you may use the following more "classic" syntax to perform ad-hoc data validation: * * ```php * $model = new DynamicModel(compact('name', 'email')); * $model->addRule(['name', 'email'], 'string', ['max' => 128]) *     ->addRule('email', 'email') *     ->validate(); * ``` * * DynamicModel implements the above ad-hoc data validation feature by supporting the so-called * "dynamic attributes". It basically allows an attribute to be defined dynamically through its constructor * or [[defineAttribute()]]. * * @author Qiang Xue <qiang.xue@gmail.com> * @since 2.0 */class DynamicModel extends Model{    private $_attributes = [];    /**     * Constructors.     * @param array $attributes the dynamic attributes (name-value pairs, or names) being defined     * @param array $config the configuration array to be applied to this object.     */    public function __construct(array $attributes = [], $config = [])    {        foreach ($attributes as $name => $value) {            if (is_int($name)) {                $this->_attributes[$value] = null;            } else {                $this->_attributes[$name] = $value;            }        }        parent::__construct($config);    }    /**     * {@inheritdoc}     */    public function __get($name)    {        if ($this->hasAttribute($name)) {            return $this->_attributes[$name];        }        return parent::__get($name);    }    /**     * {@inheritdoc}     */    public function __set($name, $value)    {        if ($this->hasAttribute($name)) {            $this->_attributes[$name] = $value;        } else {            parent::__set($name, $value);        }    }    /**     * {@inheritdoc}     */    public function __isset($name)    {        if ($this->hasAttribute($name)) {            return isset($this->_attributes[$name]);        }        return parent::__isset($name);    }    /**     * {@inheritdoc}     */    public function __unset($name)    {        if ($this->hasAttribute($name)) {            unset($this->_attributes[$name]);        } else {            parent::__unset($name);        }    }    /**     * {@inheritdoc}     */    public function canGetProperty($name, $checkVars = true, $checkBehaviors = true)    {        return parent::canGetProperty($name, $checkVars, $checkBehaviors) || $this->hasAttribute($name);    }    /**     * {@inheritdoc}     */    public function canSetProperty($name, $checkVars = true, $checkBehaviors = true)    {        return parent::canSetProperty($name, $checkVars, $checkBehaviors) || $this->hasAttribute($name);    }    /**     * Returns a value indicating whether the model has an attribute with the specified name.     * @param string $name the name of the attribute     * @return bool whether the model has an attribute with the specified name.     * @since 2.0.16     */    public function hasAttribute($name)    {        return array_key_exists($name, $this->_attributes);    }    /**     * Defines an attribute.     * @param string $name the attribute name     * @param mixed $value the attribute value     */    public function defineAttribute($name, $value = null)    {        $this->_attributes[$name] = $value;    }    /**     * Undefines an attribute.     * @param string $name the attribute name     */    public function undefineAttribute($name)    {        unset($this->_attributes[$name]);    }    /**     * Adds a validation rule to this model.     * You can also directly manipulate [[validators]] to add or remove validation rules.     * This method provides a shortcut.     * @param string|array $attributes the attribute(s) to be validated by the rule     * @param mixed $validator the validator for the rule.This can be a built-in validator name,     * a method name of the model class, an anonymous function, or a validator class name.     * @param array $options the options (name-value pairs) to be applied to the validator     * @return $this the model itself     */    public function addRule($attributes, $validator, $options = [])    {        $validators = $this->getValidators();        $validators->append(Validator::createValidator($validator, $this, (array)$attributes, $options));        return $this;    }    /**     * Validates the given data with the specified validation rules.     * This method will create a DynamicModel instance, populate it with the data to be validated,     * create the specified validation rules, and then validate the data using these rules.     * @param array $data the data (name-value pairs) to be validated     * @param array $rules the validation rules. Please refer to [[Model::rules()]] on the format of this parameter.     * @return static the model instance that contains the data being validated     * @throws InvalidConfigException if a validation rule is not specified correctly.     */    public static function validateData(array $data, $rules = [])    {        /* @var $model DynamicModel */        $model = new static($data);        if (!empty($rules)) {            $validators = $model->getValidators();            foreach ($rules as $rule) {                if ($rule instanceof Validator) {                    $validators->append($rule);                } elseif (is_array($rule) && isset($rule[0], $rule[1])) { // attributes, validator type                    $validator = Validator::createValidator($rule[1], $model, (array)$rule[0], array_slice($rule, 2));                    $validators->append($validator);                } else {                    throw new InvalidConfigException('Invalid validation rule: a rule must specify both attribute names and validator type.');                }            }        }        $model->validate();        return $model;    }    /**     * {@inheritdoc}     */    public function attributes()    {        return array_keys($this->_attributes);    }}
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