I've set up an abstract parent class, and a concrete class which extends it. Why can the parent class not call the abstract function?
//foo.php
<?php
abstract class AbstractFoo{
abstract public static function foo();
public static function getFoo(){
return self::foo();//line 5
}
}
class ConcreteFoo extends AbstractFoo{
public static function foo(){
return "bar";
}
}
echo ConcreteFoo::getFoo();
?>开发者_如何学C;
Error:
Fatal error: Cannot call abstract method AbstractFoo::foo() in foo.php on line 5
This is a correct implementation; you should use static, not self, in order to use late static bindings:
abstract class AbstractFoo{
public static function foo() {
throw new RuntimeException("Unimplemented");
}
public static function getFoo(){
return static::foo();
}
}
class ConcreteFoo extends AbstractFoo{
public static function foo(){
return "bar";
}
}
echo ConcreteFoo::getFoo();
gives the expected "bar".
Note that this is not really polymorphism. The static keywork is just resolved into the class from which the static method was called. If you declare an abstract static method, you will receive a strict warning. PHP just copies all static methods from the parent (super) class if they do not exist in the child (sub) class.
You notice that word self
?
That is pointing to AbstractClass. Thus it is calling AbstractClass::foo(), not ConcreteClass::foo();
I believe PHP 5.3 will provide late static bindings, but if you are not on that version, self will not refer to an extended class, but the class that the function is located in.
See: http://us.php.net/manual/en/function.get-called-class.php
It's a rule that abstract
and static
keywords can not be use on a method at the same time.
A method with an abstract
keyword means that sub-class must implement it. Adding static to a method of a class allows us to use the method without instantiating it.
So that is why the error occurs.
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