ID:               47872
 User updated by:  kwutzke at web dot de
 Reported By:      kwutzke at web dot de
 Status:           Open
 Bug Type:         Feature/Change Request
 Operating System: all
 PHP Version:      5.3.0RC1
 New Comment:

Another option, which I can't quite assess, would be to always
(silently) use the root namespace. For some reason I don't believe this
is a good idea in PHP. Maybe because, as seen in my example, is the
ability to expand the root/global namespace with other (own) classes.


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2009-04-02 02:50:20] kwutzke at web dot de

Other examples of use wildcards are:

use \namespace2\*;
use \otherns\*;
use \myown\sub\*;
use \myown\sub\subsub\*;

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2009-04-02 02:44:11] kwutzke at web dot de

Description:
------------
When using namespaces you always have to put the exact 'use \ClassName'
statement into the code. This list of dependencies can become quite
large in some classes. To relieve programmers from having to manually
put use statements to the top (or elsewhere) a namespace wildcard should
be added to the language.

Much like in Java, where in stead of writing

import java.awt.Image;
import javax.swing.JTextField;
import javax.swing.JComboBox;
import javax.swing.JSpinner;
import javax.swing.JCheckBox;
import javax.swing.JRadioButton;
import javax.swing.JMenuItem;
import javax.swing.JMenu;
import javax.swing.JMenuBar;

one could write

import java.awt.*;
import javax.swing.*;

This saves a lot of time while writing the code. An IDE (plugin) might
replace the wildcards with the actually used classes.

Wrting

use \*;

seems natural to me. Don't know how much this RFE is possible
language-wise. It would however make lots of sense for PHP 5.3.

I'm not sure if this is the right place to ask for a language
enhancement of this caliber.

Reproduce code:
---------------
<?php

namespace whatever; //in dir whatever

//use \*; <- why not???

//PHP standard classes
use \Exception;

//ZF classes
use \Zend_Version;


class ZfTools
{
        public static function checkVersion($strRequiredVersion = '1.5.1')
        {
                switch ( Zend_Version::compareVersion($strRequiredVersion) )
                {
                        case -1: //required is older
                                return true;

                        case  0: //equal
                        case  1: //newer
                                return false;

                        default: //should never be executed
                                throw new Exception('Error comparing Zend 
Framework version!');
                }
        }
        
}

?>

Expected result:
----------------
use \*;

would compile so that Zend_Version and Exception can be used without
leading backslashes.

Actual result:
--------------
use \*;

Generates a parse error "Parse error: parse error, expecting `T_STRING'
in C:\dev\apache\htdocs\whatever\ZfTools.php on line 5"




------------------------------------------------------------------------


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