Object Inheritance
Inheritance is a well-established programming principle, and PHP makes use
of this principle in its object model. This principle will affect the way
many classes and objects relate to one another.
For example, when extending a class, the subclass inherits all of the
public and protected methods, properties and constants from the parent class.
Unless a class overrides
those methods, they will retain their original functionality.
This is useful for defining and abstracting functionality, and permits the
implementation of additional functionality in similar objects without the
need to reimplement all of the shared functionality.
Private methods of a parent class are not accessible to a child class. As a result,
child classes may reimplement a private method themselves without regard for normal
inheritance rules. Prior to PHP 8.0.0, however, final and static
restrictions were applied to private methods. As of PHP 8.0.0, the only private method
restriction that is enforced is private final constructors, as that
is a common way to "disable" the constructor when using static factory methods instead.
The visibility
of methods, properties and constants can be relaxed, e.g. a
protected method can be marked as
public, but they cannot be restricted, e.g.
marking a public property as private.
Unless autoloading is used, the classes must be defined before they are
used. If a class extends another, then the parent class must be declared
before the child class structure. This rule applies to classes that inherit
other classes and interfaces.
Inheritance Example
printItem('baz'); // Output: 'Foo: baz'
$foo->printPHP(); // Output: 'PHP is great'
$bar->printItem('baz'); // Output: 'Bar: baz'
$bar->printPHP(); // Output: 'PHP is great'
?>
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