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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?

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  • 3
    Once you've overwritten 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.
    – CD001
    Oct 12, 2017 at 14:45
  • You could add a getter for x in the parent, then redeclare A and use the getter - repl.it/M6uV
    – ʰᵈˑ
    Oct 12, 2017 at 14:46
  • What you're trying to do is like giving a variable a value, then overwrite the value and then you want to get the previous value.
    – Chin Leung
    Oct 12, 2017 at 14:53

1 Answer 1

1

What you're essentially asking is:

What if I overrite a value but still want the old value?

Then there is only one simple solution. You make another variable and store it in there before overriting it.

1
  • 1
    That was what I thought; but knowing some of PHP stuffs and ways to go... it was worth wondering!
    – Xenos
    Oct 12, 2017 at 14:57

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