It is frowned upon because of the issue of scope. As you've no doubt experienced, variables inside your functions and classes do not interact directly with anything outside their respective areas. Otherwise you would have variables colliding all over the place. This is why Objects and Methods in general are replacing procedural code from yesteryear. It's much easier to keep track of what's going on in your program when you have to explicitly pass the data, instead of relying on various $GLOBALS
.
I highly recommend you dependency inject your database pointers. This way you don't keep re-creating your connection and your classes and methods become agnostic as to how the connection came to be.
class user{
private $username;
/** @var stdClass */
protected $db;
public function __construct($db) {
$this->db = $db;
}
public function get_last_visit(){
return $this->db->get(
'users',
'last_visit',
'username' => $this->username
);
}
}
$user = new user($db);