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<?php
/**
* @file
*/
namespace CultuurNet\UDB3\Organizer;
use Broadway\Serializer\SerializableInterface;
class OrganizerProjectedToJSONLD implements SerializableInterface
{
* @var string
private $id;
* @param string $id
* @param string $iri
public function __construct($id, $iri)
$this->id = (string) $id;
$this->iri = (string) $iri;
iri
In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:
class MyClass { } $x = new MyClass(); $x->foo = true;
Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion:
class MyClass { public $foo; } $x = new MyClass(); $x->foo = true;
}
* @return string
public function getId()
return $this->id;
public function getIri()
return $this->iri;
* @return array
public function serialize()
return [
'id' => $this->getId(),
'iri' => $this->getIri(),
];
* @param array $data
* @return OrganizerProjectedToJSONLD
public static function deserialize(array $data)
return new self($data['id'], $data['iri']);
In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:
Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion: