See this answer for detailed description.
In general, it is possible to do the things you describe and PHP allows it. But remember that people are used to polymorphism and method overridding so if your base class allows to override some method and then, uses a self
to call it, it will be weird that I can't change the class behavior, although it exposes it in its API as public
or protected
method.
IMO, it violates the Principle of least astonishment, referenced in Uncle Ben's Clean Code book.
Also, there are some differences between static
and $this
bindings, because static
will always try to reference the element in the narrower, not always appropriate scope. This behavior is presented in this example, and is explained in the note above, which I reference here:
In non-static contexts, the called class will be the class of the object instance. Since $this->
will try to call private methods from the same scope, using static::
may give different results. Another difference is that static::
can only refer to static properties.
Thus, although it is possible to use static
in some places where $this
is appropriate, the static
keywords was introduced to use access static methods and fields and using it for another purposes should be considered confusing.