Behaviors ========= A behavior (also knows as *mixin*) can be used to enhance the functionality of an existing component without modifying the component's code. In particular, a behavior can "inject" its public methods and properties into the component, making them directly accessible via the component itself. A behavior can also respond to events triggered in the component, thus intercepting the normal code execution. Unlike [PHP's traits](http://www.php.net/traits), behaviors can be attached to classes at runtime. Using behaviors --------------- A behavior can be attached to any class that extends from [[yii\base\Component]]. In order to attach a behavior to a class, the component class must implement the `behaviors` method. As an example, Yii provides the [[yii\behaviors\TimestampBehavior]] behavior for automatically updating timestamp fields when saving an [[yii\db\ActiveRecord|Active Record]] model: ```php use yii\behaviors\TimestampBehavior; class User extends ActiveRecord { // ... public function behaviors() { return [ 'timestamp' => [ 'class' => TimestampBehavior::className(), 'attributes' => [ ActiveRecord::EVENT_BEFORE_INSERT => ['created_at', 'updated_at'], ActiveRecord::EVENT_BEFORE_UPDATE => 'updated_at', ], ], ]; } } ``` In the above, the name `timestamp` can be used to reference the behavior through the component. For example, `$user->timestamp` gives the attached timestamp behavior instance. The corresponding array is the configuration used to create the [[yii\behaviors\TimestampBehavior|TimestampBehavior]] object. Besides responding to the insertion and update events of ActiveRecord, `TimestampBehavior` also provides a method `touch()` that can assign the current timestamp to a specified attribute. As aforementioned, you can access this method directly through the component, like the following: ```php $user->touch('login_time'); ``` If you do not need to access a behavior object, or the behavior does not need customization, you can also use the following simplified format when specifying the behavior, ```php use yii\behaviors\TimestampBehavior; class User extends ActiveRecord { // ... public function behaviors() { return [ TimestampBehavior::className(), // or the following if you want to access the behavior object // 'timestamp' => TimestampBehavior::className(), ]; } } ``` Creating your own behaviors --------------------------- To create your own behavior, you must define a class that extends [[yii\base\Behavior]]. ```php namespace app\components; use yii\base\Behavior; class MyBehavior extends Behavior { } ``` To make it customizable, like [[yii\behaviors\TimestampBehavior]], add public properties: ```php namespace app\components; use yii\base\Behavior; class MyBehavior extends Behavior { public $attr; } ``` Now, when the behavior is used, you can set the attribute to which you'd want the behavior to be applied: ```php namespace app\models; use yii\db\ActiveRecord; class User extends ActiveRecord { // ... public function behaviors() { return [ 'mybehavior' => [ 'class' => 'app\components\MyBehavior', 'attr' => 'member_type' ], ]; } } ``` Behaviors are normally written to take action when certain events occur. Below we're implementing `events` method to assign event handlers: ```php namespace app\components; use yii\base\Behavior; use yii\db\ActiveRecord; class MyBehavior extends Behavior { public $attr; public function events() { return [ ActiveRecord::EVENT_BEFORE_INSERT => 'beforeInsert', ActiveRecord::EVENT_BEFORE_UPDATE => 'beforeUpdate', ]; } public function beforeInsert() { $model = $this->owner; // Use $model->$attr } public function beforeUpdate() { $model = $this->owner; // Use $model->$attr } } ```