Just an addition to my previous comment below: functions such as is_subclass_of(), is_a(), and the instanceof operator also do not detect the new lineage of the object; if you are using this function to simulate multiple or dynamic inheritance, you may need to implement your own method of determining class lineage.
runkit_class_adopt
(PECL runkit:0.7-0.9)
runkit_class_adopt — Convert a base class to an inherited class, add ancestral methods when appropriate
Description
bool runkit_class_adopt
( string $classname
, string $parentname
)
Parameters
- classname
-
Name of class to be adopted
- parentname
-
Parent class which child class is extending
Return Values
Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
Examples
Example #1 A runkit_class_adopt() example
<?php
class myParent {
function parentFunc() {
echo "Parent Function Output\n";
}
}
class myChild {
}
runkit_class_adopt('myChild','myParent');
myChild::parentFunc();
?>
The above example will output:
Parent Function Output
runkit_class_adopt
muramas at cyberdiscordia dot org
04-Sep-2005 11:25
04-Sep-2005 11:25
muramas at cyberdiscordia dot org
02-Sep-2005 11:09
02-Sep-2005 11:09
Function visibility (in PHP5) has some quirks as compared to the normal behavior with "extends". Consider the following:
class base {
public function a() { $this->b(); }
private function b() { echo "This is b()"; }
}
This will work fine:
class inherit extends base {
public function c() { $this->a(); }
}
$x = new inherit;
$x->c();
while this:
class adopt {
public function c() { $this->a(); }
}
runkit_class_adopt('adopt','base');
$x = new adopt;
$x->c();
will generate a fatal "Call to private method base::b() from context 'adopt'" error. Protected members can be called from the inherited methods, but still cannot be called from the original class (i.e. if b() were declared protected, the example would work as written, but adopt::c() still could not call base::b() directly.
