-1

Is there a way to set something as global in a class and have all methods of that class to have access to it? Currently if I use global $session; I have to add it into every method that uses it even if all the methods are in the same class.

If I try to add it directly into the class then I get a php error saying it is expecting a function

global $session;

Here is a better example...

class test{
    function test1(){
        $self->test2($var);
    }

    function test2($var){
        return $var
    }
}

in this case I am getting this error below, do I need to use global or what? Fatal error: Call to a member function test2() on a non-object

3 Answers 3

3

I may be misunderstanding the question, but I think what you want is an instance variable:

<?php
    class Foo {
        var $bar = "blue"

        function output() {
            echo $this->bar . "\n";
        }

        function a() {
            $this->bar = "green";
        }
        function b() {
            $this->bar = "red";
        }
    }
 ?>

In this case, $bar is the instance variable, accessible from each method. The following code, using the Foo class:

$newFoo = new Foo();
$newFoo->output();
$newFoo->a();
$newFoo->output();
$newFoo->b();
$newFoo->output();

Would create the following output:

blue
green
red
2
  • sorry I kind of had 2 questions that got mixed together here, what I meant is lets say I have 2 methods in 1 class, I need to call method b inside of method a but I get this error when I do Fatal error: Call to a member function test2() on a non-object
    – JasonDavis
    Sep 23, 2009 at 3:15
  • Are you calling $this->test2(); ?
    – Doug Hays
    Sep 23, 2009 at 4:05
3

There are different ways to do this,

<?php
class test{
    private $p_var;
    public static $s_var;

    function  test(){
        $this->p_var="RED";
        self::$s_var="S_RED";
    }

    function test1(){
        return $this->test2($this->p_var);
    }
    function test2($var){ 
        return $var;
    }
    function test3($var){ 
        $this->p_var=$var;
    }

    function stest1(){
        return $this->test2(self::$s_var);
    }
    function stest2($var){ 
        return $var;
    }
    function stest3($var){ 
        self::$s_var=$var;
    }

} 
?>

Heere $objtest is the object of the test() class:

$objtest=new test();

echo  $objtest->test1(),"<br/>"; 
$objtest->test3("GREEN"); 
echo $objtest->test1(),"<br/>";
echo "<br/>";

echo  $objtest->stest1(),"<br/>"; 
$objtest->stest3("S_GREEN"); 
echo $objtest->stest1(),"<br/>";

test::$s_var="S_BLUE";
echo $objtest->stest1();

Would create the following output

RED
GREEN

S_RED
S_GREEN
S_BLUE

Using static variable(test::$s_var) you can achieve what you want. If you have any confusion about self and $this then you can read this document

2

You're getting an error because you're using self instead of this.

i.e.

$this->test2($var);
0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.