Question

I have index.php and I want to include class.twitter.php inside it, how do I do this?

Hopefully then when I put the below code in index.php it will work.

$t = new twitter();
$t->username = 'user';
$t->password = 'password';

$data = $t->publicTimeline();
Was it helpful?

Solution

Your code should be something like

require_once('class.twitter.php');

$t = new twitter;
$t->username = 'user';
$t->password = 'password';

$data = $t->publicTimeline();

OTHER TIPS

You can use either of the following:

include "class.twitter.php";

or

require "class.twitter.php";

Using require (or require_once if you want to ensure the class is only loaded once during execution) will cause a fatal error to be raised if the file doesn't exist, whereas include will only raise a warning. See http://php.net/require and http://php.net/include for more details

Include a class example with the use keyword from Command Line Interface:

PHP Namespaces don't work on the commandline unless you also include or require the php file. When the php file is sitting in the webspace where it is interpreted by the php daemon then you don't need the require line. All you need is the 'use' line.

  1. Create a new directory /home/el/bin

  2. Make a new file called namespace_example.php and put this code in there:

    <?php
        require '/home/el/bin/mylib.php';
        use foobarwhatever\dingdong\penguinclass;
    
        $mypenguin = new penguinclass();
        echo $mypenguin->msg();
    ?>
    
  3. Make another file called mylib.php and put this code in there:

    <?php
    namespace foobarwhatever\dingdong;
    class penguinclass 
    {
        public function msg() {
            return "It's a beautiful day chris, come out and play! " . 
                   "NO!  *SLAM!*  taka taka taka taka."; 
        }   
    }
    ?>   
    
  4. Run it from commandline like this:

    el@apollo:~/bin$ php namespace_example.php 
    
  5. Which prints:

    It's a beautiful day chris, come out and play!
    NO!  *SLAM!*  taka taka taka taka
    

See notes on this in the comments here: http://php.net/manual/en/language.namespaces.importing.php

I suggest you also take a look at __autoload.
This will clean up the code of requires and includes.

  1. require('/yourpath/yourphp.php');

    http://php.net/manual/en/function.require.php

  2. require_once('/yourpath/yourphp.php');

    http://php.net/manual/en/function.require-once.php

  3. include '/yourpath/yourphp.php';

    http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.include.php

  4. use \Yourapp\Yourname

    http://php.net/manual/fa/language.namespaces.importing.php

Notes:

Avoid using require_once because it is slow: Why is require_once so bad to use?

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