128

I would like to better understand why, in the scenario below, there is a difference in the way class constants are inherited vs. instance variables.

<?php
class ParentClass {
    const TEST = "ONE";
    protected $test = "ONE";

    public function showTest(){
        echo self::TEST;
        echo $this->test;
    }
}

class ChildClass extends ParentClass {
    const TEST = "TWO";
    protected $test = "TWO";

    public function myTest(){
        echo self::TEST;
        echo $this->test;
    }
}

$child = new ChildClass();
$child->myTest();
$child->showTest();

Output:

TWO
TWO
ONE
TWO

In the code above, ChildClass does not have a showTest() method, so the ParentClass showTest() method is used by inheritance. The results show that since the method is executing on the ParentClass, the ParentClass version of the TEST constant is being evaluated, whereas because it's evaluating within the ChildClass context via inheritance, the ChildClass member variable $test is being evaluated.

I've read the documentation, but can't seem to see any mention of this nuance. Can anyone shed some light for me?

3
  • WTF? Constant overriding!? Do not do this! never!
    – qwert_ukg
    Sep 20, 2016 at 2:17
  • 2
    @qwert_ukg Indeed. Someone should communicate that to the developers of PHP. Or at least allow final... Aug 18, 2017 at 1:18
  • 7
    There are sure good enough use cases even for constant overriding :] Feb 7, 2020 at 7:33

2 Answers 2

255

self:: Isn't inheritance-aware and always refers to the class it is being executed in. If you are using php5.3+ you might try static::TEST as static:: is inheritance-aware.

The difference is that static:: uses "late static binding". Find more information here:

http://php.net/manual/en/language.oop5.late-static-bindings.php

Here's a simple test script I wrote:

<?php

class One
{
    const TEST = "test1";

    function test() { echo static::TEST; }
}
class Two extends One
{
    const TEST = "test2";
}

$c = new Two();

$c->test();

output

test2
8
  • 32
    + for mentioning static::. Nov 28, 2012 at 20:23
  • Awesome. Thanks for the clarification and for providing the additional information on late-static-bindings (which I have yet to digest).
    – Tom Auger
    Nov 29, 2012 at 14:41
  • 3
    Since test() is not a static method, why not using $this::TEST with PHP5.3+?
    – Xenos
    Jun 24, 2014 at 13:05
  • Hi @Xenos - The goal of the example was to show that instance-level code executing in class One was retrieving static values from class Two. self::TEST would have returned "test1" where static::TEST returns the expected "test2" - Hope that helps, thanks for replying! Jun 26, 2014 at 1:45
  • 1
    Hi @DavidFarrell - Yes, I got the self:: / static:: difference but I don't get why using static:: instead of $this:: (not self::). Is there a difference between $this:: and static:: (since there is one between static::/$this:: and self::)?
    – Xenos
    Jun 29, 2014 at 12:29
19

In PHP, self refers to the class in which the called method or property is defined. So in your case you're calling self in ChildClass, so it uses the variable from that class. Then you use self in ParentClass, so it wil then refer to the variable in that class.

if you still want the child class to override the const of the parent class, then adjust the following code in your parent class to this:

public function showTest(){
    echo static::TEST;
    echo $this->test;
}

Note the static keyword. This is uses "late static binding". Now you're parent class will call the const of your child class.

1
  • pro. static:: made job in abstraction instead of self:: Nov 7, 2018 at 9:58

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