ajsie
ajsie

Reputation: 79676

call a static method inside a class?

how do i call a static method from another method inside the same class?

$this->staticMethod();

or

$this::staticMethod();

Upvotes: 198

Views: 153933

Answers (5)

jeroen
jeroen

Reputation: 91734

self::staticMethod();

More information about the Static keyword.

Upvotes: 402

Theakash
Theakash

Reputation: 203

call a static method inside a class

className::staticFunctionName

example

ClassName::staticMethod();

Upvotes: 0

Joundill
Joundill

Reputation: 7533

This is a very late response, but adds some detail on the previous answers

When it comes to calling static methods in PHP from another static method on the same class, it is important to differentiate between self and the class name.

Take for instance this code:

class static_test_class {
    public static function test() {
        echo "Original class\n";
    }

    public static function run($use_self) {
        if($use_self) {
            self::test();
        } else {
            $class = get_called_class();
            $class::test(); 
        }
    }
}

class extended_static_test_class extends static_test_class {
    public static function test() {
        echo "Extended class\n";
    }
}

extended_static_test_class::run(true);
extended_static_test_class::run(false);

The output of this code is:

Original class

Extended class

This is because self refers to the class the code is in, rather than the class of the code it is being called from.

If you want to use a method defined on a class which inherits the original class, you need to use something like:

$class = get_called_class();
$class::function_name(); 

Upvotes: 21

Nishad Up
Nishad Up

Reputation: 3615

In the later PHP version self::staticMethod(); also will not work. It will throw the strict standard error.

In this case, we can create object of same class and call by object

here is the example

class Foo {

    public function fun1() {
        echo 'non-static';   
    }

    public static function fun2() {
        echo (new self)->fun1();
    }
}

Upvotes: 2

Ja͢ck
Ja͢ck

Reputation: 173532

Let's assume this is your class:

class Test
{
    private $baz = 1;

    public function foo() { ... }

    public function bar() 
    {
        printf("baz = %d\n", $this->baz);
    }

    public static function staticMethod() { echo "static method\n"; }
}

From within the foo() method, let's look at the different options:

$this->staticMethod();

So that calls staticMethod() as an instance method, right? It does not. This is because the method is declared as public static the interpreter will call it as a static method, so it will work as expected. It could be argued that doing so makes it less obvious from the code that a static method call is taking place.

$this::staticMethod();

Since PHP 5.3 you can use $var::method() to mean <class-of-$var>::; this is quite convenient, though the above use-case is still quite unconventional. So that brings us to the most common way of calling a static method:

self::staticMethod();

Now, before you start thinking that the :: is the static call operator, let me give you another example:

self::bar();

This will print baz = 1, which means that $this->bar() and self::bar() do exactly the same thing; that's because :: is just a scope resolution operator. It's there to make parent::, self:: and static:: work and give you access to static variables; how a method is called depends on its signature and how the caller was called.

To see all of this in action, see this 3v4l.org output.

Upvotes: 48

Related Questions