Re: [PHP] classes and objects: php5. The Basics

2007-01-16 Thread Jochem Maas
Martin Alterisio wrote: > Forgot to mention that calling a non-static function this way should > generate an E_STRICT warning. and IIRC it will eventually be made a fatal error in php6, somebody please correct me if I'm wrong! > > 2007/1/16, Martin Alterisio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >> >> Backward c

Re: [PHP] classes and objects: php5. The Basics

2007-01-16 Thread Martin Alterisio
Forgot to mention that calling a non-statical function this way should generate an E_STRICT warning. 2007/1/16, Martin Alterisio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: Backward compatibility with PHP4, where member functions couldn't be declared as static. Any member function could be called statically providing

Re: [PHP] classes and objects: php5. The Basics

2007-01-16 Thread Martin Alterisio
Backward compatibility with PHP4, where member functions couldn't be declared as static. Any member function could be called statically providing a static context instead of an object instance. 2007/1/16, Cheseldine, D. L. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: Hi I'm stuck on The Basics page of the php5 Object

RE: [PHP] classes and objects: php5. The Basics

2007-01-16 Thread Jay Blanchard
[snip] http://uk.php.net/manual/en/language.oop5.basic.php The top example has the code: A::foo(); even though foo is not declared static in its class. How does it get called statically without being declared static? [/snip] foo() is a function and would not be static, it can be public (defau

Re: [PHP] Classes and Objects

2003-06-10 Thread Frank Keessen
Don, Are you using phpmailer of http://phpmailer.sourceforge.net/ ??? Looks like: require("class.phpmailer.php"); this is not properly configured! Please check if the path is going alright.. Regards, Frank - Original Message - From: "Don" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "php list" <[EMAIL PR

Re: [PHP] CLASSES AND OBJECTS..

2001-04-14 Thread Plutarck
Nope, I'm afraid not. Currently PHP will support single level inheritance only. So A can extend B, but C cannot extend B. You will need to create a class of B to extend it with C. I suppose PHP may one day support it, but I am guessing that the Zend API can't currently handle it. I think it will