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
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
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
[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
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
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
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