ID:               28442
 Updated by:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reported By:      kell_pt at users dot sf dot net
-Status:           Open
+Status:           Bogus
 Bug Type:         Zend Engine 2 problem
 Operating System: any
 PHP Version:      5CVS-2004-05-19 (dev)
 New Comment:

Thank you for taking the time to write to us, but this is not
a bug. Please double-check the documentation available at
http://www.php.net/manual/ and the instructions on how to report
a bug at http://bugs.php.net/how-to-report.php

What you want is 'private static'


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2004-05-21 05:28:11] kell_pt at users dot sf dot net

I would also like to call your attention to Bug #26930 which was
dismissed as "Bogus", where in fact it's a very valid problem.

Seems like the behaviour for static data/methods doesn't follow the OO
paradigm very close. I hope you guys don't dismiss these problems and
provide a sound implementation. :)

Cheers.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2004-05-19 09:27:20] kell_pt at users dot sf dot net

Description:
------------
It isn't possible to override static variable values in classes, seeing
as the same variable is shared across the whole hierarchy of classes.
Each child class should be able to have their own value for a static
variable.

A good example is trying to have a counter of the number of instances
per class.

ClassB::$count will always be the same as ClassA::$count.

It is possible that you don't consider this a bug, but it is quite
against the OOP paradigm, and worth a note. Basically, when loading a
subclass, the default values for the variables should be loaded, and a
new variable (memory space) created, instead of keeping a reference to
the superclass' static variable.


This is somehow related to Bug #16245 (which regards static variables
declared within functions). But where the behaviour in such a situation
is a bit unspecified, in this case it's quite against OO programming.

Reproduce code:
---------------
class ClassA
{
   static $count;
   static $somevar;

   static __construct()
   {
       self::$count++; // this won't work as expected
   }
}


class ClassB extends ClassA
{
}



// another simpler example
ClassA::$somevar = 'A';
ClassB::$somevar = 'B';
// ClassA::$somevar is now 'B' instead of 'A';
ClassA::$somevar = 'A';
// ClassB::$somevar is now 'A' instead of 'B';




------------------------------------------------------------------------


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