0

I am trying to write a simple program that queries sql to the database using object orientated programing. I keep getting the error:

Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to a member function query() on null in C:\xampp\htdocs\learning\core\classes\core.php:11 Stack trace: #0 C:\xampp\htdocs\learning\core\classes\core.php(23): core->query('SELECT * FROM c...') #1 C:\xampp\htdocs\learning\core\classes\core.php(27): test->test() #2 C:\xampp\htdocs\learning\core\init.php(6): require('C:\xampp\htdocs...') #3 {main} thrown in C:\xampp\htdocs\learning\core\classes\core.php on line 11

<?php
class core{
    protected $db, $results;
    private $rows;

    public function __construct(){
        $this->db = new mysqli('localhost', 'root','','test');
    }

    public function query($sql){
        $this->result = $this->db->query($sql);
    }

    public function rows(){
        for($x = 1; $x <= $this->db->affected_rows; $x++){
            $this->rows[] = $this->result->fetch_assoc();
        }
        return $this->rows;
    }
}
class test extends core{
    public function test(){
        $this->query("SELECT * FROM currentseason");

    }
}


  $test = new test();
    $test->test();
    ?>
5
  • 2
    It would seem that $this->db is NULL, you should be checking the result of $this->db = new mysqli('localhost', 'root','','test') to make sure it succeeded.
    – Nick
    Oct 16, 2018 at 0:47
  • 1
    The real issue here is that without a __construct() method, PHP will also use a method named the same as the class as the constructor so unfortunately OP, test#test() is your constructor. I'd say this little fact is not widely known (these days) so downvotes are a little harsh.
    – Phil
    Oct 16, 2018 at 2:36
  • @Nick that's not necessary if OP has set MySQLi to throw exceptions (which is always a good idea IMO)
    – Phil
    Oct 16, 2018 at 2:39
  • 1
    @Phil definitely a good idea but seemingly one that has been adopted more by the PDO crowd...
    – Nick
    Oct 16, 2018 at 3:09
  • The problem was that the method name "test" was the same name as the class. Thank you for your help!
    – Temp0w
    Oct 16, 2018 at 14:10

1 Answer 1

3

You have not called the parent constructor from the test class.

The PHP docs says:

Note: Parent constructors are not called implicitly if the child class defines a constructor. In order to run a parent constructor, a call to parent::__construct() within the child constructor is required. If the child does not define a constructor > then it may be inherited from the parent class just like a normal class method (if it was not declared as private).

I modified your test class as follows: (with a modified query to a table in my test DB)

class test extends core {
    public function __construct(){
        parent::__construct();
    }

    public function test() {
        $this->query("SELECT * FROM bug_table");
        foreach ($this->rows() as $row) {
            echo $row['category_id'], '<br>';
        }
    }
}

Output:

Server
Database
Server
Server
Server

...at the same PHP information found here, I changed the test() class constructor to __construct as you have in the core class, but kept the function named test() that runs the query. Having a constructor the same name as the class is quickly being deprecated. Depending on your PHP version, run php -l file.php at the command line on your file to check any potential issues.

1
  • The problem was the method name "test" was the same name as the class. Thank you for your help!
    – Temp0w
    Oct 16, 2018 at 14:11

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.