TLDR: Only Define What Isn't in The Default/Public
To define or not define global variables within class scope — ultimately, it is a design decision that should be taken to improve code readability, and nothing more. Personally, I don't "define all of these," and I use the default scope of public
(Source: PHP.net -> Visibility). I do that until I actually need to change any of them for a particular need.
The Basic Objection
"But shouldn't that be set so we can define public
and private
as needed?" : If you need to set a global variable's status, then set it. Until you set it, it is public
. So, set it when you need it. Don't write code that does nothing with the hope that one day in the future you'll thank yourself -- odds are you may need to completely revamp everything your old self did. And what if you have hundreds of variables all set to the same default instance? How does that help anyone?
Why Avoid Hardcoding the Accessibility Value on Attributes?
At some point, we will be able to configure the default, and then all that code that hard-coded this class accessibility, or that class accessibility, will need to be reprogrammed. In general, hard-coding is bad, and the large amounts of typing/copying-pasting associated with class attribute access definitions is just not worth the result. Use the default.
It's Really All About Style
If all your class variables public and the extra global definitions (100's of them maybe) doesn't help you, then dump them. If they give structure to your code, though, then keep them. It's something done to help the coder, not the compiler.
Which would you rather have to fix?
This?
class basicscript extends baseformat {
public function __construct($args) {
$this->startUp($args);
return $this;
}
}
Or this?
class basicscript extends baseformat {
public $desired_script;
public $desired_action;
public $object_code;
public $object_parent;
public $object_list;
public $script_location;
public $script_name;
public $script_file;
public $script_extension;
public $script_format;
public $script_format_lower;
public $script_args;
public $authentication_object;
public $cleanser_object;
public $query_object;
public $db_access_object;
public $domain_object;
public $language_object;
public $dictionary;
public $time;
public $cookie;
public $formats_object;
public $version_object;
public $redirect_object;
public function __construct($args) {
$this->startUp($args);
return $this;
}
}