I'm getting an error that I think is because I've made some kin开发者_Go百科d of mistake in a refactoring, but I can't find documentation on when $this
is bound, and my error could be explained by it being bound statically.
Extra points (I can't actually give you extra points) for links to excellent documentation about this kind of thing in php.
[Edit]
The error that I'm getting is telling me that Subclass::$var
doesn't exist when I do, for example, echo $this->var
in a superclass. The $var
exists in the subclass, though.
$this
becomes available after you've called the constructor. Logically you can't use $this
in a static
function.
Aside from calling $this
in a static
function there isn't a whole lot that can go wrong timing wise as there is simply no way in PHP.
What exactly is the error you're getting? Code would useful too.
This works in PHP:
class A {
public function foo() {
echo $this->bar;
}
}
class B extends A {
public $bar = 1;
}
$b = new B;
$b->foo(); // 1
It works because of the dynamic scope resolution that PHP has (i.e.: scope is resolved at runtime as opposed to compile time). However, I'd recommend against it, because it is really a particularity of the language for one. For second, failing to declare $bar
in a subclass would result in an error. I think that a class should only reference members that it is aware of.
The same code, say in C++:
class A {
public:
void foo() {
std::cout << bar;
}
};
class B : public A {
public:
int bar;
B() {
bar = 1;
}
};
...would give you a compile error (In A::foo(): 'bar' was not declared in this scope).
Yes, $this
is bound dynamically, as is evidenced by the fact that the output of the following is "foo":
<?php
class Base
{
public function ecc(){
echo $this->subvar;
}
}
class Sub extends Base
{
public $subvar;
public function __construct(){
$this->subvar = 'foo';
$this->ecc();
}
}
new Sub();
?>
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