3

Is it possible to access a child property from a parent class, when both parent and child share the same property name, but with different visibility?

Consider the following example:

abstract class A {
    private $n = 1;

    public function getN() {
        return $this->n;
    }
}

class B extends A {
    protected $n = 2;
}

$b = new B;
echo $b->getN(); // returns 1

getN() returns 1, because it returns the value of its own private $n.

Is it possible to get the value of the child's protected $n instead, from the parent?

1 Answer 1

3

Normally, you can't. You would have to declare A::$n protected or public, because private members always have precedence. If you declare A::$n public, then B::$n will also need to be public, since you cannot override a property with less visibility than its parent. You can do it only by using the Reflection API:

abstract class A {
    private $n = 1;

    public function getN() {
        $ref = new ReflectionProperty($this, 'n');
        $ref->setAccessible(true);
        echo $ref->getValue($this);
    }
}

class B extends A {
    protected $n = 2;
}

$b = new B;
echo $b->getN(); // 2
1
  • Thank you, that is perfectly suitable for what I want to do as Reflection was already used on that class for other purposes.
    – BenMorel
    Jul 29, 2011 at 17:21

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