CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2012/ch1 1w34 vd: Difference between revisions

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Example:
Example:


    <source>
     <?php

     <?php

     class GameClass
     class GameClass
     {

     {

   // Declare a public constructor

   // Declare a public constructor

   public function __construct() { }

   public function __construct() { }

 

   // Declare a public method

    // Declare a public method

   public function GamePublic() { }

    public function GamePublic() { }
   // Declare a protected method




   protected function GameProtected() { }
    // Declare a protected method


   // Declare a private method


    protected function GameProtected() { }
   private function GamePrivate() { }
 
   // This is public



    // Declare a private method

   function Play()
    private function GamePrivate() { }
 
    // This is public

    function Play()

   {

   {

        $this->GamePublic();

        $this->GamePublic();
Line 35: Line 29:
   
}
   
}
   ?>
   ?>
</source>
 


$mygame = new GameClass;


$mygame = new GameClass;

$mygame->GamePublic(); // Works


$mygame->GamePublic(); // Works


Revision as of 21:59, 14 September 2012

Re- implantation of methods in PHP 5

The object model in PHP5 was rewritten to include OO features such as final, abstract and visibility for classes and methods and improve the overall performance of the language. Re-implantation of methods in Php 5 can be achieved in the following manner:

Object Inheritance This is an important OO feature that PHP uses in its object model. When a subclass extends from a parent class, it inherits all the public and protected methods from the parent class. The issues that affect how the inherited methods behave are:

-Method Visibility All methods that are defined as ‘public’ and ‘protected’ in the parent class are ‘visible’ in the subclass. Public and protected are access modifiers that define the visibility of methods between different classes. Methods defined as ‘private’ access are not visible in the subclass. Methods declared without any access keyword are ‘public’. Example:

   <?php

   class GameClass
   {

  // Declare a public constructor

  public function __construct() { }



   // Declare a public method 
   public function GamePublic() { }    // Declare a protected method 
   protected function GameProtected() { } 

   // Declare a private method
    private function GamePrivate() { }    // This is public
    function Play() 
   { 
        $this->GamePublic(); 
        $this->GameProtected(); 
        $this->GamePrivate();
     }

  
}
  ?>



$mygame = new GameClass; 
$mygame->GamePublic(); // Works
 $mygame->GameProtected(); // Fatal Error
 $mygame->GamePrivate(); // Fatal Error
 $mygame->Play(); // Public, Protected and Private work




class BoardGame extends GameClass
 { 
    // This is public 
    function PlayDice()
     {
         $this->GamePublic(); 
        $this->GameProtected(); 
        $this->GamePrivate(); // Fatal Error
     }
 }



$myboard = new BoardGame;
 $myboard->GamePublic(); // Works
 $myboard->PlayDice(); // Public and Protected work, not Private
 </syntaxhighlight>

-Overriding If a subclass defines a new method with the same name and signature as that of the method from the parent class then an object of the subclass calling that method will execute the implementation of the method defined in the subclass. Example: change this example for overriding

<?php
class game
{

    public function game-name($string)
    {
        echo 'Game: ' . $string . PHP_EOL;

    }
    
    public function play()

    {

        echo 'I like this game.' . PHP_EOL;
    }
}



class chess-game extends game
{

    public function game-name($string)
    {
        echo 'Board Game: ' . $string . PHP_EOL;

    }
}



$gm = new game ();
$cg = new chess-game();
$game->game-name('cricket'); // Output: 'Game: cricket'

$gm->play();       // Output: 'I like this game' 
$cg->game-name('chess'); // Output: 'Board Game: chess'

$cg->play();       // Output: 'I like this game'
?>

-Scope Resolution
When a subclass extends a class, then the overridden and overloaded methods of the parent class can be called, using the scope resolution operator (::) inside the subclass.

<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
<?php
class ParentClass
{
    protected function parentFunc() {
        echo "ParentClass::parentFunc()\n";
    }
}

class ChildClass extends ParentClass
{
    // Override parent's definition
    public function parentFunc()
    {
        // Call the parent function
        parent::parentFunc();
        echo "ChildClass::parentFunc()\n";
    }
}

$class = new ChildClass();
$class->parentFunc();
?>
Output
ParentClass::parentFunc()
ChildClass::parentFunc()

Class Abstraction Abstract methods in PHP 5 are methods inside abstract class that only provide signature for the method without any actual implementation to it. An abstract method has an abstract keyword at the beginning of the method declaration. A class containing even a single abstract method should be declared as abstract by adding the abstract keyword to its declaration. Any class inheriting from an abstract class should provide implementation to all of the abstract methods or declare it abstract. No class can inherit from more than one abstract class. The inheriting class, should have the same signature for the inherited abstract methods and the same or less restrictive visibility as defined for the methods in the abstract class.

<?php
abstract class ParentAbstractClass
{

    // Method without definition

    abstract protected function getName();

    abstract protected function setName($name);


    // Method with definition

    public function printName()
     {

        print $this->getName() . "\n";
    }
}


class ConcreteChild extends ParentAbstractClass
{
 //Method from abstract class implemeted

    protected function getName()
    {
        return "ConcreteChild";

    }

//Method from abstract class implemeted

    public function setName($name)
    {
        return "ConcreteChild : {$name}";

    }
}



class ConcreteChild2 extends ParentAbstractClass
{
//Method from abstract class implemeted

    public function getname()
    {

        return "ConcreteChild2";
    }
//Method from abstract class implemeted

    public function setName($name)
    {

        return "ConcreteChild2 : {$name}";
    }
}



$class1 = new ConcreteChild;
$class1->printName();
echo $class1->setName('FOO') ."\n";



$class2 = new ConcreteChild2;
$class2->printName();
echo $class2->setName('FOO') ."\n";
?>

The above example will output:
ConcreteChild
ConcreteChild : FOO
ConcreteChild2
ConcreteChild2 : FOO

Object Interfaces Interface in php is a mechanism that specifies methods that a class requires to implement, without having to provide any implementation to these methods inside the interface. An interface is declared like any other class, just that it is prefixed by the interface keyword and none of its methods have any content to them. A class providing implementation to the methods of an interface has the implements keyword followed by the class name for that class. Similarly, an interface can be inherited by another interface so that, a class implementing the interface that is lowest in the inheritance hierarchy gets to implement the methods from all the interfaces. Methods inside the interface being implemented by a class should have the same signature as that of the interface. Note: An interface cannot be instantiated.

<?php
interface food
{
//Interface method with no implementation

    public function eat();
}


interface fruit
{
//Interface method with no implementation

    public function fruitName();
}


interface Apple extends food, fruit
{
//Interface method with no implementation
  public function juice();
}


class GreenApple implements Apple
{
//Implementing methods from all the interfaces

public function eat()

    {
    echo Food: eat();
    }


    public function fruitName()

    {
    echo Fruit: fruitName();

    }


    public function juice()

    {
    echo Apple: juice();

    }
}
?>

The class GreenApple will implement all the methods that it has inherited from all the interfaces in inheritance hierarchy.