I'm trying to retrieve a variable from an extended class. This is how my main class looks:

class SS {
	public $NONE = NULL;
	public $NUMBERS = array("1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6", "7", "8", "9", "0");
	public $OPERATORS = array("=", "&&", ">", "<", "+", "-", "/", "*", "^");
	public $DBLQUOTES = '"$1"';
	public $SNGQUOTES = "'$1'";
	public $CODE;

	function SuperSyn($sCode, $cLang) {			
		$hLang = new VB6;
		$VB6 = $hLang->__construct();
		echo $VB6->ssAuthor;
	}
}

And my extended class looks like this (I've removed many of the keywords).

class VB6 extends SS {
	public function __construct() {
		$ssAuthor = "James Brooks";
		$ssCSS = "languages/vb6.css";
		$ssNumbers = $NUMBERS;
		$ssKeywords = array("Abs", "Access", "AddItem");
		$ssReserved = $NONE;
		$ssComments = "('.+)";
		$ssOperators = $OPERATORS;
		$ssDoubleQuote = $NONE;
		$ssSingleQuote = $NONE;
	}
}

If I remove the public function __construct being called, PHP bitches that it's expecting a function.

My question is, how can I retrieve a variable from the extended class into my main class?

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4 Answers

up vote 0 down vote accepted

The constructor will be called for you when you create an object, so this should work:

function SuperSyn($sCode, $cLang) {                     
     $hLang = new VB6(); //I think you need some parameters here
     echo $VhLang->ssAuthor;
}

However in your VB6 constructor you are currently only assigning local variables, so you wouldn't be able to access ssAuthor externally. Instead you probably want to do something like:

class VB6 extends SS {
    public $ssAuthor;

    public function __construct() {
        $this->ssAuthor = "James Brooks";
        //etc.
    }
}
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That's brilliant! Thank you Tom! – James Brooks Sep 1 '09 at 10:20
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Use php's parent keyword.

PHP parent

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Where though? Where am I putting the keyword? – James Brooks Sep 1 '09 at 10:11
Check: stackoverflow.com/questions/393204/… There the topic is discussed in detail. – KB22 Sep 1 '09 at 10:47
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use parent:: or $this-> (depends, i.e. you have two variables with the same name)

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But where? If I've still got the function in the extended class, where? – James Brooks Sep 1 '09 at 10:15
wait. after reading your code again it doesn’t make sense at all. you hold an derived object in the base class? (SS:SuperSyn that is) and why do you re-apply all your member variables? nevertheless, this should work: $ssNumbers = $this->NUMBERS – knittl Sep 1 '09 at 10:19
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I think that there's a logical problem with your expectiation. Why should a function of the class SS know about a variable that only exists in the VB6 subclass?

That would not be a clean inheritance behaviour and reveals a problem with your classes.

Two choices to solve that:

  • Put the variable in the main class to use it in a function in that class
  • Put the function using the subclass's variable inside the subclass

(After reading the comments about the parent keyword and ´$this´ variable: I understood the question differently and don't think either of those to would help since the opposite direction is required: parent class function > subclass variable, not subclass function > parent class variable)

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Well the idea of this is that you'll be able to create your own classes for different languages, I need to be able to get each of the different syntax rules from the class. – James Brooks Sep 1 '09 at 10:13
If you'll have to fetch individual information from the subclasses it might be a good idea to make the SS class abstract and add an abstract function like ´getSyntaxRules()´ that each subclass has to implement and that returns the rules for that language. – Jörg Sep 1 '09 at 10:16
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