In PHP, static members (methods and properties) belong to the class itself, not to individual objects. This means you can access them without creating an instance of the class. Static members are useful when you want to share data or functionality across multiple objects. PHP provides three keywords to access static methods and properties: self::, parent::, and static::. Each works differently, especially when using inheritance. In this article, we’ll explain how these keywords work and show their differences with examples.
Global Variables: Static properties can be used as global variables within a class, accessible to all instances.
Utility Methods: Static methods can provide utility functions that are independent of individual objects.
Class-Level Constants: Static properties can be used to define class-level constants.
Singleton Pattern: Static methods and properties are essential for implementing the Singleton pattern.
To call a static method, you use the :: operator followed by the method name. Here's an example:
class MyClass { public static function greet() { echo "Hello, world!"; } } MyClass::greet(); // Output: Hello, world!
To access a static property, you also use the :: operator followed by the property name. Here's an example:
class MyClass { public static $count = 0; public static function incrementCount() { self::$count++; } } MyClass::incrementCount(); echo MyClass::$count; // Output: 1
self::
The self:: keyword refers to the class in which the code is written. It does not account for inheritance, meaning if a child class overrides a static method or property, self:: will still refer to the parent class where the code is defined.
parent::
The parent:: keyword is used to call a static method or property from the immediate parent class. It bypasses any overridden methods in the child class, ensuring that the parent’s method or property is used.
static::
The static:: keyword works similarly to self::, but it accounts for late static binding. This means that if a static method or property is overridden in a child class, static:: will refer to the method or property in the most derived class, even if it's called from a parent class.
Let’s see how each of these keywords behaves in a PHP program with inheritance.
class A { public static function sayHello() { return "Hello from A"; } public static function test() { return self::sayHello(); } } class B extends A { public static function sayHello() { return "Hello from B"; } } echo B::test(); // Output: "Hello from A"
In this example, self:: in class A refers to the sayHello() method in A. Even though class B overrides the method, self:: calls the parent class method, producing the output "Hello from A."
class A { public static function sayHello() { return "Hello from A"; } } class B extends A { public static function sayHello() { return parent::sayHello() . " and B"; } } echo B::sayHello(); // Output: "Hello from A and B"
In this example, class B calls parent::sayHello() to include the message from the parent class A and then appends its own message. The output is "Hello from A and B."
class A { public static function sayHello() { return "Hello from A"; } public static function test() { return static::sayHello(); } } class B extends A { public static function sayHello() { return "Hello from B"; } } echo B::test(); // Output: "Hello from B"
Here, static:: in class A refers to the method sayHello() in the most derived class, which is B. This is because static:: allows late static binding, and the method in class B is called, resulting in "Hello from B."
self::: Refers to the class in which it is used, ignoring inheritance. This is useful when you don’t want methods in child classes to affect the method being called.
parent::: Specifically calls methods or properties from the parent class, even if they are overridden in the child class. It’s useful when extending functionality from a parent class but still needing access to the original methods.
static::: Enables late static binding, meaning it refers to the method or property in the most derived class at runtime, even if called from a parent class. It’s useful for situations where you want the behavior to adapt depending on the calling class.
Understanding the differences between self::, parent::, and static:: helps write more robust, maintainable PHP code, especially in complex object-oriented systems.
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