Protected static member variables

user275074 picture user275074 · Nov 25, 2010 · Viewed 29.7k times · Source

I've recently been working on some class files and I've noticed that the member variables had been set in a protected static mode like protected static $_someVar and accessed like static::$_someVar.

I understand the concept of visibility and that having something set as protected static will ensure the member variable can only be accessed in the super class or derived classes but can I access protected static variables only in static methods?

Thanks

Answer

netcoder picture netcoder · Nov 25, 2010

If I understand correctly, what you are referring to is called late-static bindings. If you have this:

class A {
   protected static $_foo = 'bar';

   protected static function test() {
      echo self::$_foo;
   }
}

class B extends A {
   protected static $_foo = 'baz';
}

B::test(); // outputs 'bar'

If you change the self bit to:

echo static::$_foo;

Then do:

B::test(); // outputs 'baz'

Because self refers to the class where $_foo was defined (A), while static references the class that called it at runtime (B).

And of course, yes you can access static protected members outside a static method (i.e.: object context), although visibility and scope still matters.