Hi Phillip

Yes, thanks this does help.

The problem with the tutorials that I have seen so far is that they are very
simplistic and therefore do not reveal the benefits of this style of
programming.

If anybody knows of any good tutorials, I would appreciate a link.

Thanks

Peter (Mojo)


Philip Hallstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED].;
> I'm not an OOP master, but I'll give it a shot.  In your example below
> you don't gain much from using OOP.  However, consider this example (all
> pseudo code)...
>
> class animal (
> function eat() ...
> function sleep() ...
> function walk() ...
> );
>
> class bird extends animal (
> function fly()...
> #inherits eat,sleep,walk
> );
>
>
> Now where this gets useful is when you want to create a class "duck".  You
> can just do this:
>
> class duck extends bird (
> function swim()...
> #inherits eat,sleep,walk,fly
> );
>
> What's nice about this is you don't need to know the implementation of the
> animal or bird class to do this. Heck you don't even need the source (just
> the compiled library).  All you need to know is the public functions (or
> methods).  However you still get all the functionality of an animal and
> bird.
>
> You also get some overhead, but that's the price you pay.
>
> Does that help?
>
> Search the net for OOP tutorial and I'm sure you'll find some better
> examples and reasons.
>
> -philip
>
> On Wed, 6 Mar 2002, mojo jojo wrote:
>
> > Hi
> >
> > I've been using php for a while now but I have not got my head around
OOP
> > (classes).
> >
> > Why bother using them? I've read thru a few tutorials on using classes
and
> > the examples given are quite simple. This is probably the problem - I
just
> > can't see the benefit of using this style of programming.
> >
> > Here is what I'm getting  at.
> >
> > ------------USING A CLASS-----------------
> > class Table {
> >
> >     var $rows;
> >     var $columns;
> >
> >     function MakeTable() {
> >
> >         draw a table with $this->columns as the number of columns
> >         and $this->rows as the number of rows
> >
> >     }
> > }
> >
> > $mytable = new Table;
> > $mytable->rows = 5;
> > $mytable->columns = 10;
> > $mytable->MakeTable();
> >
> > ---------------USING A NORMAL FUNCTION-----
> >
> > function MakeTable($rows,$columns) {
> >
> >     make a table with $rows as the number of rows
> >     and $columns as the number of columns
> >
> > }
> >
> > $rows = 5;
> > $columns = 10;
> > MakeTable($rows,$columns);
> >
> > -----------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > Using a class doesn't appear to give me any benefits - in fact the code
is
> > longer.
> >
> > I know that you can spawn more instances of the same class which sounds
> > useful, however I can also run my function as many times as I like using
> > different variables.
> >
> > What am I missing here?
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> > Mojo
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
> > To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
> >
>



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