| ########################## |
| Creating Ancillary Classes |
| ########################## |
| |
| In some cases you may want to develop classes that exist apart from your |
| controllers but have the ability to utilize all of CodeIgniter's |
| resources. This is easily possible as you'll see. |
| |
| get_instance() |
| =============== |
| |
| **Any class that you instantiate within your controller functions can |
| access CodeIgniter's native resources** simply by using the |
| get_instance() function. This function returns the main CodeIgniter |
| object. |
| |
| Normally, to call any of the available CodeIgniter functions requires |
| you to use the $this construct:: |
| |
| $this->load->helper('url'); $this->load->library('session'); $this->config->item('base_url'); etc. |
| |
| $this, however, only works within your controllers, your models, or your |
| views. If you would like to use CodeIgniter's classes from within your |
| own custom classes you can do so as follows: |
| |
| First, assign the CodeIgniter object to a variable:: |
| |
| $CI =& get_instance(); |
| |
| Once you've assigned the object to a variable, you'll use that variable |
| *instead* of $this:: |
| |
| $CI =& get_instance(); $CI->load->helper('url'); $CI->load->library('session'); $CI->config->item('base_url'); etc. |
| |
| .. note:: You'll notice that the above get_instance() function is being |
| passed by reference:: |
| |
| $CI =& get_instance(); |
| |
| This is very important. Assigning by reference allows you to use the |
| original CodeIgniter object rather than creating a copy of it. |