PHP: Difference between revisions

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* trait: a trait is similar to a class, but only intended to group functionality in a fine-grained and consistent way. It is not possible to instantiate a Trait on its own. It is an addition to traditional inheritance and enables horizontal composition of behavior; that is, the application of class members without requiring inheritance.
* trait: a trait is similar to a class, but only intended to group functionality in a fine-grained and consistent way. It is not possible to instantiate a Trait on its own. It is an addition to traditional inheritance and enables horizontal composition of behavior; that is, the application of class members without requiring inheritance.
==Resources==
* http://php.net/manual/en/

Revision as of 20:47, 16 August 2018

OO

  • namespace?
  • interface?
  • self?
  • $this?
  • use?
  • annotations?
  • visibility:
    • private: only in this class
    • protected: only in derived classes
    • public: everywhere
  • ctor
function __construct() {
  parent::__construct(); // has to be called explicitly
  ...
}
  • dtor
function __destruct() {
  parent::__destruct(); // has to be called explicitly
}
  • trait: a trait is similar to a class, but only intended to group functionality in a fine-grained and consistent way. It is not possible to instantiate a Trait on its own. It is an addition to traditional inheritance and enables horizontal composition of behavior; that is, the application of class members without requiring inheritance.

Resources