Using a Custom Calculator

By default, ramsey/uuid uses brick/math as its internal calculator. However, you may change the calculator, if your needs require something else.

To swap the default calculator with your custom one, first make an adapter that wraps your custom calculator and implements Ramsey\Uuid\Math\CalculatorInterface. This might look something like this:

Create a custom calculator wrapper that implements CalculatorInterface
namespace MyProject;

use Other\OtherCalculator;
use Ramsey\Uuid\Math\CalculatorInterface;
use Ramsey\Uuid\Type\Integer as IntegerObject;
use Ramsey\Uuid\Type\NumberInterface;

class MyUuidCalculator implements CalculatorInterface
{
    private $internalCalculator;

    public function __construct(OtherCalculator $customCalculator)
    {
        $this->internalCalculator = $customCalculator;
    }

    public function add(NumberInterface $augend, NumberInterface ...$addends): NumberInterface
    {
        $value = $augend->toString();

        foreach ($addends as $addend) {
            $value = $this->internalCalculator->plus($value, $addend->toString());
        }

        return new IntegerObject($value);
    }

    /* ... Class truncated for brevity ... */

}

The easiest way to use your custom calculator wrapper is to instantiate a new FeatureSet, set the calculator on it, and pass the FeatureSet into a new UuidFactory. Using the factory, you may then generate and work with UUIDs, using your custom calculator.

Use your custom calculator wrapper when working with UUIDs
use MyProject\MyUuidCalculator;
use Other\OtherCalculator;
use Ramsey\Uuid\FeatureSet;
use Ramsey\Uuid\UuidFactory;

$otherCalculator = new OtherCalculator();
$myUuidCalculator = new MyUuidCalculator($otherCalculator);

$featureSet = new FeatureSet();
$featureSet->setCalculator($myUuidCalculator);

$factory = new UuidFactory($featureSet);

$uuid = $factory->uuid1();