I saw some questions about accessing a parent class attribute (like PHP Accessing Parent Class Variable) but I seem to struggle in an edgy case (I actually don't need that pattern, but curiosity, you know...☺):
What if child class overrides a parent class variable, and still wants to access it?
Example:
class A {
protected $x = 'a';
}
class B extends A {
protected $x = 'b';
public function showX() {
var_dump(array(
'this->x' => $this->x,
'parent->x' => '??',
}
}
$b = new B();
$b->showX();
Without relying on a getX()
method on parent (and use a parent::getX()
in the B class or simply a $this->getX()
if B didn't override that getX
method), how to get a result like:
this->x: 'b'
parent->x: 'a'
As http://php.net/manual/pl/keyword.parent.php#94177 states, using a parent::$x
won't work, because it would look for the non-existing static attribute $x
. Any working way?
parent::$x
... it's overwritten. Not really any different to procedurally reassigning a variable later in the script - you can't get the original value back.x
in the parent, then redeclareA
and use the getter - repl.it/M6uV