the code explains it better:
class Class{
$var = 0;
function getvar()
echo $this->var;
}
}
$inst1 = new Class();
// I want to change $var here to 5
$inst2 = new Class();
echo $inst2->getvar(); // shou开发者_如何学编程ld be 5
Is it possible
Static. http://php.net/manual/en/language.oop5.static.php
class MyClass {
public static $var = 0;
function setVar($value) {
self::$var = $value;
}
function getVar() {
return self::$var;
}
}
echo MyClass::$var;
MyClass::setVar(1);
echo MyClass::getVar(); //Outputs 1
You should be able to do this using a static member variable.
class foo {
private static $var;
public static setVar($value) {
self::$var = $value;
}
public static getVar() {
return self::$var;
}
}
$a = new foo;
$a::setVar('bar');
$b = new foo;
echo $b::getVar();
// should echo 'bar';
You should declare $var
to be static:
A data member that is commonly available to all objects of a class is called a static member. Unlike regular data members, static members share the memory space between all objects of the same class.
You can use static variables:
class AAA{
public static $var = 0;
function getvar() {
return AAA::$var;
}
}
AAA::$var = "test";
$a1 = new AAA();
var_dump($a1->getvar());
var_dump(AAA::$var);
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