Same function name in different isolated classes is not allowed? What am I doing wrong?
I reduced my real code to the minimum required to make some test. Here it is:
<?php
error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', '1');
class confFunctions {
function getConf() {
function doWork() {
echo "I am from confFunctions!<br />";
}
doWork();
}
}
class thePage {
function loadPage() {
function doWork() {
echo "I am from thePage!<br />";
}
doWork();
}
}
// Start check.
echo "Checking...<br />";
$conf = new confFunctions();
$conf->getConf();
$page = new thePage();
$page->loadPage();
?>
The output is:
Checking...
I am from confFunctions!
Fatal error: Cannot redeclare doWork() (previously declared in /var/www/Test2/index.php:11) in /var/www/Test2/index.php on line 23
Renaming one of the shared-name functions makes all working well. That is, changing doWork to doWork1 in the second class, like this:
class thePage {
function loadPage() {
function doWork1() {
echo "I am from thePage!<br />";
}
doWork1();
}
}
gives correct results:
Checking...
I am from confFunctions!
I am from thePage!
Should not what is inside a class be visible only to that class, if not declared public?
By declaring a function in a function, you are actually declaring the second function into the global scope.
If you want your functions to be limited to the class scope, don't declare a function in another function, but rather declare them under each other.
Consider this code that declares a function in another function (in a class):
<?php
class MyFunctions {
function load() {
function doWork() {
echo "I am doing my work from global scope";
}
}
}
$mf = new MyFunctions();
$mf->load();
// $mf->doWork(); <-- won't work here
doWork(); // <-- this will work!
?>
Now consider this code that declares a function under another function (in a class).
<?php
class MyFunctions {
function load() {
//...
}
function doWork() {
echo "I am doing my work from class scope";
}
}
$mf = new MyFunctions();
// $mf->load(); <-- not really important anymore
$mf->doWork(); // <-- this will work now
// doWork(); <-- won't work here anymore
?>
Function scope is always namespace wide when declaring a named function.
You'll need to assign it to a variable to constrain it to a specific scope ($doWork = function() { }).
You seem to be going down an odd path though. Perhaps you should just use a private method?
Full example just to make it clear:
class confFunctions {
function getConf() {
$doWork = function() {
echo "I am from confFunctions!<br />";
};
$doWork();
}
}
class thePage {
function loadPage() {
$doWork = function() {
echo "I am from thePage!<br />";
};
$doWork();
}
}
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