tedd wrote:
> At 3:17 PM +0100 2/23/10, Daniel Egeberg wrote:
>> 2010/2/23 Dasn <d...@lavabit.com>:
>>  > Could you tell me how to retrieve the 'return type'?
>>>  Thanks.
>>>
>>>
>>>  --
>>>  Dasn
>>
>> That's not possible. Consider this function:
>>
>> function foo()
>> {
>>     switch (rand(0, 1)) {
>>         case 0: return 42;
>>         case 1: return 'bar';
>>     }
>> }
>>
>> What should the return type be?
>>
>> -- 
>> Daniel Egeberg
> 
> 
> It can be anything you want to test for -- check out:
> 
> is_int();
> is_nan();
> is_float();
> is_long();
> is_string();
> 
> IOW, is_whatever();
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> tedd
> 

As PHP is loosely typed, the only real way around this is to specify a
return type in a PHPDoc block, then parse that using reflection to get
the @return parameter.

another option is to use something like haXe which is an ECMA style
typed language that compiles to multiple targets, one of which is PHP.

Regards!

Nathan


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