In php, is it possible for a method in a parent class to use an alias in a child class from within an instance of the child class?
Parent class:
class ParentClass
{
public function getNewFoo()
{
return new Foo();
}
}
Child class:
use My\Custom\Path\To\Foo;
class ChildClass extends ParentClass
{
}
Code:
$child = new ChildClass();
return $child->getNewFoo();
I would like this code to return a new instance of My\Custom\Path\To\Foo()
rather than a new instance of Foo()
.
I realize I can store the desired path to Foo in a class property, or I can simply instantiate the desired Foo in the child class. However, both of these seem redundant considering the path is already stored in the use
statement in the child class.
You're asking a lot of PHP here. It's supposed to know that your use
statement is going to impact something in a completely different class, in a completely different file, just because?
If PHP did that by default it would cause a lot of very strange problems for people. Re-define the method, or as you point out, store that property in the class itself.
I think a lot of developers would expect, or at least prefer that PHP behave the way it does.
It sounds like what you need here is a factory function that can be redefined in the subclass to behave differently, or in other words, that getNewFoo()
should be overridden in the subclass to use the alternate version.